Global Times

EU slaps sanctions on Syrian scientists for chemical attack

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The EU imposed sanctions on 16 Syrian scientists and military officials on Monday for their suspected involvemen­t in a chemical attack in northern Syria in April which killed scores of civilians.

Western intelligen­ce agencies accuse the government of Bashar al- Assad of carrying out the attack, arguing that rebels in the area would not have had the capabiliti­es. The internatio­nal chemical weapons watchdog said in June the nerve agent sarin was used.

Syrian officials have repeatedly denied using banned toxins.

The measures, agreed upon by EU foreign ministers at a meeting in Brussels, target eight Syrian scientists and eight top military officials.

Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said they showed Europe’s resolve “in dealing with those who are responsibl­e for chemical weapons attacks.”

This takes the number of people placed under EU sanctions related to the Syrian conflict to 255, the Council of EU government­s in a statement. Existing EU sanctions are also in place on 67 companies linked to Assad’s government.

Washington issued sanc- tions in the same month of the attack in the town of Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib province, placing restrictio­ns on hundreds of employees and scientists at a Syrian government agency believed to have developed chemical weapons.

Syria joined a chemicals weapons convention in 2013 under a Russian- US agreement, averting military interventi­on under then US President Barack Obama.

While the European Union has no military role in the conflict, it is the biggest aid donor and has said it will not help rebuild Syria until a peace pro- cess involving a transition away from Assad’s government is underway.

But the 28- member bloc’s position on Syria is in flux after France’s new President Emmanuel Macron broke with the previous French government position by saying he saw no legitimate successor to Assad and no longer considered his departure a pre- condition to resolving the war.

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