MOSCOW,
October 27 (IslamOnline & News agencies) - The United States asked
the Russian authorities to reveal what gas was used by special forces
in their assault to rescue hostages from a Moscow theatre but has not
received any reply, a U.S. Embassy spokesman said Sunday, October 27.
"We
asked the Russian authorities about the type of gas used but we have
not been informed. We're still waiting for a response," the
spokesman, who asked not to be named, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"We
have a hostage in the hospital and it's relevant to her
treatment," the official said, adding that U.S. consular
officials were talking to her doctors and U.S. physicians were on the
way to the hospital.
The
authorities have refused to say what gas they pumped into the theatre
where some 800 people were held by Chechen rebels for three days,
prompting doctors to complain that they do not know how best to treat
the patients.
Hundreds
of hostages who survived the ordeal are ill in hospital, many in
serious condition from what is believed to be the after-effects of the
gas, used to incapacitate the hostage-takers before the assault.
According
to doctors quoted by the Kommersant daily, it was either sleeping gas
or a nerve gas.
One
hundred and eighteen hostages have been confirmed dead after the
Russian assault.
The
spokesman said U.S. authorities had located one American so far, but
they were still searching for two other U.S. nationals believed to
have been in the theatre.
Meanwhile,
doctors involved in treating survivors said Sunday that a Dutch
national and a Kazakh teenager, who died after Russian special forces
launched the assault to rescue the hostages, succumbed to gas
poisoning.
The
unnamed doctors were quoted in a report on the privately-owned NTV
television.
A
diplomat at the Dutch Embassy in Moscow confirmed that one of its
nationals of Russian origin, Natalja Zjirov, 38, had died in hospital
late Saturday, the Interfax news agency reported.
She
is the only Western casualty so far among the 75 foreigners who were
held hostage.
A
13-year-old Kazakh girl, Alexandra Litiaga, also died in hospital,
local media quoting the Kazakhstan Foreign Ministry said.
A
third non-Russian, Belarussian national Lyudmila Bogacheva, 55, also
died, the RIA news agency said.
The
three had been among more than 800 people taken hostage in the theatre
last Wednesday by heavily-armed Chechen rebels demanding an end to
Russia's war in their southern breakaway republic.
Witnesses
said many of the hostages were overcome by an incapacitating gas
pumped into the theatre by Russian special forces immediately before
the Saturday pre-dawn assault.
Russian
authorities said Saturday that more than 750 people had been rescued,
but since then the number of dead has edged up to 118 and the final
toll is still not known.
Nearly
350 of the rescued hostages were taken to hospital, according to the
authorities.
An
Internet news service, gazeta.ru, reported that at least 546 of the
freed hostages had been hospitalized, many in serious condition from
the gas.
An
AFP employee, who was among the hostages rescued from Chechen rebels,
said Sunday that a mystery gas used by Russian forces in the raid was
pumped in through the ceiling and left him feeling "as if I had
drunk a ton of vodka."
"I
was less intoxicated than the others. I had a bandana around my neck
and I pressed it against my face," said AFP editorial assistant
Oleg Zyogonov, 26, speaking by telephone from hospital.
"I
passed out and then regained consciousness, this happened several
times. It was as if I had drunk a ton of vodka. I heard shouts and
lots of gunshots, as in a fight," he added.
It
was then that Zyogonov spotted "a light mist coming down from the
ceiling. Then, nobody saw anything."
"We
all laid down when we smelt gas," Zyogonov said. "Everyone
understood the assault was in the offing."
While
coming out of the theatre, Zyogonov saw many bodies lying on the
floor, but none of them bore bullet impacts - an account that seemed
to confirm reports that the mystery gas caused some of the hostage
deaths.
"I
saw no bullet impact on the bodies," he said.
Zyogonov
said he was being kept in hospital because doctors feared the
after-effects of the gas and that hospital staff had forbidden him to
talk to anybody and were monitoring his telephone conversation with
AFP.