Israel teria nova arma secreta
18/10/2006 

Médicos da Faixa de Gaza detectaram danos nunca vistos em seus pacientes. 
Segundo eles, os males foram causados por armas israelenses e causam 
queimaduras e feridas profundas, que podem levar à amputação.

As feridas foram vistas pela primeira vez em julho, quando o exército de Israel 
realizou uma série de operações na Faixa de Gaza.

Ainda não é certo que tais danos foram gerados por uma nova arma secreta de 
Israel. Mas o exército israelense se recusou a declarar as armas que compõem 
seu arsenal, negando que tais males foram provocados pelo Dime – Dense Inert 
Mental Explosive. O Dime é uma nova arma que causa uma forte explosão em uma 
área limitada. 

Fonte: http://www.opiniaoenoticia.com.br/interna.php?mat=6081

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Maiores detalhes sobre DIME:

   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dense_Inert_Metal_Explosive

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Gaza doctors say patients suffering mystery injuries after Israeli attacks 

Rory McCarthy in Gaza City
Tuesday October 17, 2006
The Guardian 

Palestinian doctors wheel the body of a militant killed during an Israeli 
operation in the Gaza Strip. Photograph: Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images

Doctors in Gaza have reported previously unseen injuries from Israeli weapons 
that cause severe burning and deep internal wounds often resulting in 
amputations or death. 
The injuries were first seen in July, when the Israeli military launched a 
series of operations in Gaza following the capture of an Israeli soldier by 
Palestinian militants. 
Doctors said that, unlike traditional combat injuries from shells or bullets, 
there were no large shrapnel pieces found in the patients' bodies and there 
appeared to be a "dusting" on severely damaged internal organs. 
"Bodies arrived severely fragmented, melted and disfigured," said Jumaa Saqa'a, 
a doctor at Shifa hospital, the main casualty hospital in Gaza City. "We found 
internal burning of organs, while externally there were minute pieces of 
shrapnel. When we opened many of the injured people we found dusting on the 
internal organs." 
It is not clear whether the injuries come from a new weapon. The Israeli 
military declined to detail the weapons in its arsenal, but denied reports that 
the injuries came from a Dense Inert Metal Explosive (Dime), a new experimental 
weapon that causes a powerful blast but in a localised area. The Dime, while 
causing severe injuries to its target, is intended to limit what the defence 
industry calls "collateral damage." 
In Gaza, Dr Saqa'a said the small pieces of shrapnel found in patients' bodies 
did not show up under x-ray. "We are used to seeing shrapnel penetrate the body 
making localised damage. Now we didn't see shrapnel, but we found the 
destruction," he said. 
Most of the injuries were around the abdomen, nearly a metre up from the 
ground, he said. The doctors also found that an injured patient who had been 
stabilised after one or two days, might suddenly die. "The patient dies without 
any apparent scientific cause," he said. "So far we don't know why." 
At the Kamal Odwan Hospital, in Beit Lahiya, deputy director Saied Jouda, said 
he had found similar injuries. "We don't know what it means - new weapons or 
something new added to a previous weapon," he said. "We had patients who died 
after stabilisation and that is very unusual." 
He too found patients with severe internal injuries without signs of any large 
shrapnel pieces. Often there was severe burning. "There was burning, big raw 
areas of charred flesh," he said. "This must be related to the type of 
explosive material." 
Photographs of some of the dead from Shifa hospital showed bodies that had been 
melted and blackened beyond recognition. Others showed internal bleeding 
without signs of shrapnel wounds. In several cases doctors amputated badly 
burnt limbs. 
At least 250 Palestinians have died in Gaza since the latest military 
operations began and hundreds more have been injured. Neither of the doctors 
could give exact figures for the numbers of patients suffering the new 
injuries, although both said that most of those brought in during July showed 
signs of these injuries. 
Dr Saqa'a of the Shifa hospital said the injuries occurred over a six-week 
period beginning in late June and running until early August, while Dr Jouda 
from Kamal Odwan hospital said he believed patients admitted even in recent 
days still showed signs of these unusual injuries. 
The health ministry in Gaza has reported these injuries came from an 
"unprecedented type of projectile," and also noted severe burning and badly 
damaged internal organs, often around the abdomen. It called for an 
investigation into the cause of the wounds. 
"You have complete burns that lead to amputation. You find shrapnel entering 
the body and leaving very, very small holes. We have never seen this before," 
said Khalid Radi, a spokesman at the health ministry. 
Tissue samples from patients in Gaza were given to journalists from the Italian 
television channel RAI. In a documentary shown last week, the channel said the 
injuries appeared similar to the effects of the Dime. An Italian laboratory 
that analysed the samples reportedly said its results were "compatible with the 
hypothesis" that a Dime weapon was involved. 
The weapon is new and in the US is still in the early stages of development. It 
has a carbon-fibre casing and contains fine tungsten particles rather than 
ordinary metal shrapnel. It causes a very powerful blast, but with a much more 
limited radius than other explosives. 
However, the Israel Defence Force (IDF) denies the use of Dime weapons. 
"The defence establishment is investing considerable effort to develop weaponry 
in order to minimise the risk of injury to innocent civilians. With regard to 
allegations of the use of Dime weaponry, the IDF denies the possession or use 
of such weapons," the military said in a statement. 
"Due to operational reasons, the IDF cannot specify the types and use of 
weapons in its possession. In addition it should be emphasised that the IDF 
only uses weapons in accordance with the international law." 
Some Israeli military experts have also dismissed the suggestion that a Dime 
weapon is involved. Isaac Ben-Israel, a professor at Tel Aviv University and a 
retired Israel air force general who was involved in weapons development, had 
seen some of the photographs of the dead and injured and said he believed the 
wounds came from ordinary explosives. "I can tell you surely that no one in 
Israel ever developed such a Dime weapon. It doesn't exist at all," he said. 
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which monitors weapons 
used in conflicts, said it had heard reports of similar injuries from Gaza and 
was collecting information on the case. "We haven't come to any sort of 
conclusion about what kind of weapon it was," said Bernard Barrett, an ICRC 
spokesman.

Fonte: http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,,1924524,00.html

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- c.a.t.
  http://catalisando.com




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