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సిరియాలో భారీ పేలుడు- 18 మంది మృతి - Idlib

సిరియా ఇడ్లిబ్​​ ప్రాంతంలోని జిస్ర్​​ అల్ శుఘుర్​ నగరంలో భారీ స్థాయిలో బాంబు పేలుడు సంభవించింది. పేలుడు ధాటికి నాలుగంతస్తుల భవనం కుప్పకూలింది. 18 మంది ప్రాణాలు కోల్పోయారు.

సిరియాలో భారీ పేలుడు- 18 మంది మృతి
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Published : Apr 25, 2019, 11:12 AM IST

సిరియాలో భారీ పేలుడు- 18 మంది మృతి

బాంబు పేలుడుతో వాయవ్య సిరియా ఇడ్లిబ్ ప్రాంతంలోని​ జిస్ర్​ అల్​ శుఘుర్​ నగరం రక్తమోడింది. పేలుడు ధాటికి నాలుగంతస్తుల భవనం కుప్పకూలింది. ఈ ఘటనలో 18 మంది ప్రాణాలు కోల్పోయారు. శిథిలాల కింద చిక్కుకున్న క్షతగాత్రుల కోసం సహాయక చర్యలు ముమ్మరం చేశారు అధికారులు.

దుండగుడు ఓ కారు నిండా పేలుడు పదార్థలు నింపుకుని వచ్చి దాడికి పాల్పడినట్లు ప్రత్యక్ష సాక్షి ఒకరు చెప్పారు.

సిరియాలోని ఇడ్లిబ్​ ప్రాంతం ప్రస్తుతం కొన్ని తిరుగుబాటు సంస్థల అధీనంలో ఉంది.

ఇదీ చూడండి: భాజపా చరిత్రలో ఈసారే అత్యధిక స్థానాల్లో పోటీ

సిరియాలో భారీ పేలుడు- 18 మంది మృతి

బాంబు పేలుడుతో వాయవ్య సిరియా ఇడ్లిబ్ ప్రాంతంలోని​ జిస్ర్​ అల్​ శుఘుర్​ నగరం రక్తమోడింది. పేలుడు ధాటికి నాలుగంతస్తుల భవనం కుప్పకూలింది. ఈ ఘటనలో 18 మంది ప్రాణాలు కోల్పోయారు. శిథిలాల కింద చిక్కుకున్న క్షతగాత్రుల కోసం సహాయక చర్యలు ముమ్మరం చేశారు అధికారులు.

దుండగుడు ఓ కారు నిండా పేలుడు పదార్థలు నింపుకుని వచ్చి దాడికి పాల్పడినట్లు ప్రత్యక్ష సాక్షి ఒకరు చెప్పారు.

సిరియాలోని ఇడ్లిబ్​ ప్రాంతం ప్రస్తుతం కొన్ని తిరుగుబాటు సంస్థల అధీనంలో ఉంది.

ఇదీ చూడండి: భాజపా చరిత్రలో ఈసారే అత్యధిక స్థానాల్లో పోటీ

RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Sacramento, California - 24 April, 2019
1. Various California Legislature
2. SOUNDBITE (English) State Sen. Richard Pan (D) Sacramento:
"The real problem is is that we have s chools that are no longer safe because they have so many medical exemptions they cannot protect the children who attend that school from an outbreak of disease. And that's why we have to step in. We cannot allow an outbreak to happen at a school that then will affect the larger community. That is not keeping people safe."
3. Various California Legislature
4. SOUNDBITE (English) State Sen. Richard Pan (D) Sacramento:
"We have US school districts receiving exemptions from physicians who basically are advertising and selling those exemptions. They're not basing them on evidence based guidelines. They're basically letting people buy them."
5. Various of audience at hearing  
6. SOUNDBITE (English) State Sen. Richard Pan (D) Sacramento:
"In the future the Department public health should be the one to review and basically approve or deny medical exemptions so they would perform that function after an application by a physician."
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Michelle Ford, opposes bill
"I'm here because I believe in parental rights and if it's a private patient doctor relationship. And I'm here to speak on behalf of all of the parents who have a vaccine injured child. And who want to maintain that personal private relationship with a doctor."
8. Public hallways California Legislature
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Del Bigtree, Informed Consent Action Network:
"I think it's pretty obvious that this bill gets in the way of the doctor patient relationship. We are putting a bureaucrat in another city apart. You know that's not in the room not diagnose your child has no idea of your family history. We're going to make them make medical decisions for our children. I think that that's a dangerous step for medicine in general."
10. Various of bill opponents
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr. Sergio Flores, California Medical Association:
"It's a serious threat and it's sad because this is something that's completely preventable. Vaccinations are highly effective. If people who need vaccinations get vaccinations healthy individuals there would not be a need for these outbreaks. There would not be these outbreaks occurring. So it's very important that people who are healthy and can get vaccinated should get vaccinated to protect the people who cannot be vaccinated."
STORYLINE:
Hundreds of critics of mandatory vaccines were in Sacramento Wednesday opposing a California proposal to give state public health officials instead of local doctors the power to decide which children can skip their shots before attending school.
They packed the first legislative hearing on a bill that proponents said would stem bogus exemptions granted in many cases by doctors who are paid to excuse students from vaccinations.
Democratic Sen. Richard Pan of Sacramento said his legislation would give state health officials the tools they need to prevent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases like measles, which in the first four months of the year have reached 28 confirmed cases in California.
An Associated Press count shows this year's national measles tally is the highest since 1994.
"If we continue to let these fake medical exemptions increase, we're going to have another larger outbreak, and we need to stop that now," Pan said.
Pan's bill is one of a number of efforts by state legislatures to address measles outbreaks. Washington state lawmakers voted Tuesday to remove parents' ability to claim a personal or philosophical exemption from vaccinating their children for measles, although medical and religious exemptions will remain. Oregon is considering removing all non-medical exemptions, drawing the ire of hundreds of parents who came to the state capitol Tuesday to protest.
Opponents of Pan's bill, including members of parental rights and religious groups, doctors and alternative healthcare practitioners, said the measure strips away parents' rights and isn't necessary to prevent outbreaks.
Del Bigtree, of the Informed Consent Action Network, produced the documentary VAXXED.
"I think it's pretty obvious that this bill gets in the way of the doctor-patient relationship," he said. "I think that that's a dangerous step for medicine in general."
Dr. Sergio Flores, testifying in support of the bill on behalf of the California Medical Association, countered that "vaccines save lives." Dozens of other medical professionals and students, many wearing white medical jackets, also lined up to support the bill.
Sacramento mother Alyssa Hernandez supported the bill, saying a high vaccination rate is necessary to protect her two-year-old Noah. He received a liver transplant and so cannot be vaccinated himself against many common but vaccination-preventable diseases. "Each of them could be life-threatening for him," she said.
Critics are unlikely to derail the bill because Pan, a Sacramento pediatrician, is chairman of the Senate Health Committee considering his legislation.
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