Use of nerve gas to suppress protesters

Images have been shared on social media by people in Javanrud, showing the use of a type of chemical gas used to suppress protesters.
To suppress protesting people in Javanrud, Kurdistan, the Islamic Republic's security forces used a type of chemical gas called "hexachloroethane," which is a type of nerve gas that temporarily disrupts the activity of the central nervous system.
The reaction that this gas shows after firing is that chlorine combines with zinc metal and forms chloride, which is pale green in color. This gas severely affects the lungs and the initial effects of poisoning with this gas include vomiting, skin irritation and coughing, which in the long term can cause liver cancer, skin allergies and kidney damage.
The security forces of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps have committed such a crime to prevent the continuation of the protests and have fired this poisonous gas for people to inhale in these cities so that they are poisoned and cannot take to the streets.
The people of Javanrud and Piranshahr have been in a state of war since yesterday morning and have been inhaling this gas. In addition, videos published from these cities show that people are still being shot, the continuous sound of the volley indicates nothing else.




