The Phnom Penh Post

OPCW collects Douma samples

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INVESTIGAT­ORS from the global chemical arms watchdog collected samples on Saturday from the site of a suspected gas attack in Syria two weeks ago, after security concerns delayed their probe.

Gruesome footage of the alleged toxic attack on April 7 in the town of Douma, just outside Damascus, horrified the world and prompted unpreceden­ted Western strikes on Syrian military installati­ons.

Just hours after the joint missile strikes, a team from the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) arrived in Syria to investigat­e the claims. But they had been unable to access Douma itself, which fell from rebel hands into joint Syrian and Russian control after the suspected chemical attack.

United Nations security experts deployed to the town on Tuesday to check it was safe but were forced to pull out after an explosion went off and they were shot at.

Investigat­ors finally collected evidence from the site for the first time on Saturday, the OPCW said.

“The samples collected will be transporte­d to the OPCW Laboratory in Rijswijk and then dispatched for analysis to the OPCW’s designated labs,” the body said in a statement, adding it could plan another visit.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry had earlier announced the inspectors reached Douma after guarantees by Syria and its own forces, and said that it expected them to carry out an “impartial investigat­ion”.

Moscow, a key ally of President Bashar al-Assad, has said its own probe into the events in Douma found no traces of chemical use.

Assad’s government, too, has repeat- edly denied using toxic weapons, and accused the West of “fabricatin­g” the claim to justify bombing Syria.

‘Invaluable evidence’

Medics and first responders in the town say more than 40 people were killed on the night of April 7, reporting foaming at the mouth, pinpoint pupils and difficulty breathing.

Investigat­ors reached Syria a week later at the country’s invitation, arriving just hours after a coordinate­d wave of French, American and British missile strikes. But they spent a week in the capital, unable to access Douma just a few miles to the east, even as groups of journalist­s visited the town on government tours.

Western powers slammed Syrian and Russian authoritie­s, saying proof that chemicals were used in Douma was probably being hidden.

“It seems likely that this attitude is intended to make proof and material evidence linked to the chemical attack disappear,” Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said on Saturday, shortly before the OPCW got access to Douma.

Analysts say if toxic chemicals were used, OPCW inspectors would still be able to find traces in clothes, walls, rocks and soil in Douma, although their potency decreases with time.

“Nerve agents like sarin can be present in the environmen­t for many weeks after use and particular­ly if you look near the site where a weapon has exploded,” said Alastair Hay, professor of environmen­tal toxicology at the University of Leeds.

Crucial evidence can also linger in victims’ blood, urine and organs.

“Autopsy samples, if available, will provide invaluable evidence and nerve agents can be found in many organs,” Hay said.

The “White Helmets”, a Syrian rescue force working in opposition-held areas, said it had given the OPCW details on the burial site of the Douma victims.

But a top official from Jaish al-Islam, the rebel group that controlled Douma during the alleged chemical attack, accused the regime of raiding the graves.

The OPCW does not have a mandate to establish who is responsibl­e for chemical attacks. The joint OPCW-UN task force that did was shut down by Russia last year after it blamed Syria’s regime for another gas attack.

Experts say it may take between two and three weeks to analyse evidence collected in Douma.

The town was the last in the Eastern Ghouta suburb to fall to Syria’s regime, after a blistering two-month offensive backed by Russia.

Since securing Ghouta, Syrian troops have shifted their focus to a pocket of territory in southern Damascus still held by Islamic State.

Heavy airstrikes pounded the Yarmuk Palestinia­n camp and adjacent Hajar al-Aswad district on Saturday.

Syria’s conflict has killed 350,000 people and defied UN peacemakin­g efforts since it erupted in 2011 with protests against Assad.

On Saturday, the 15 UN Security Council ambassador­s and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres were huddling in Sweden, a non-permanent member of the body, to try to hash out a solution. It was a first for the council, which normally holds its annual brainstorm­ing session in New York.

But the US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, said the council was “still deadlocked”.

 ?? SYRIA CIVIL DEFENCE/AFP ?? An image grab taken from a video shows unidentifi­ed volunteers giving aid to children at a hospital following an alleged chemical attack on the rebel-held town of Douma earlier this month.
SYRIA CIVIL DEFENCE/AFP An image grab taken from a video shows unidentifi­ed volunteers giving aid to children at a hospital following an alleged chemical attack on the rebel-held town of Douma earlier this month.

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