The Free Press Journal

UN blames Syrian forces for chemical arms attack in 2015

It says the substance used in the attack may have been chlorine gas, based on the symptoms the victims displayed

-

The Syrian army attacked the village of Qmenas with chemical weapons in March 2015, UN experts said in a report released on Saturday, reports AFP.

But they were unable to determine who was responsibl­e for two other chemical weapons attacks -- against Binnish in Idlib province in March 2015 and Kafr Zita in Hama province in April 2014. The report was presented on Friday to the UN Security Council. The UN-led joint investigat­ive mechanism (JIM) in late August reported that Syrian government forces had carried out at least two chemical attacks in 2014 and 2015 and that Islamic State jihadists had used mustard gas as a weapon. Of the nine total alleged chemical attacks it is considerin­g in its ongoing probe, the JIM has now attributed three to the Syrian government and one to the Islamic State group.

In its fourth report, investigat­ors concluded that there is now "sufficient informatio­n" that the attack on Qmenas "was caused by a Syrian Arab Armed Forces helicopter dropping a device from a high altitude which hit the ground and released the toxic substance that affected the population." Investigat­ors say the substance may have been chlorine gas, based on the symptoms the victims displayed. In Kafr Zita, however, the JIM could not confirm that the Syrian army had used barrel bombs to dump toxic substances because "the remnants of the device allegedly used had been removed," the report said. Investigat­ors also said that a "canister with traces of chlorine" was found in Binnish, though the container could not be "linked to any of several incident locations identified."

But the Syrian government has been shielded by its ally Russia, which has questioned the JIM findings and said the evidence is not conclusive enough to warrant sanctions. Syria agreed to get rid of its chemical stockpile and to refrain from making any use of toxic substances in warfare when it joined the Chemical Weapons Convention in 2013, under pressure from Russia.

 ??  ?? A demonstrat­or holds a teddy bear and a placard that reads "Save Aleppo's Children" during a protest calling on the British government to take action to protect the children of the Syrian city of Aleppo in London.
A demonstrat­or holds a teddy bear and a placard that reads "Save Aleppo's Children" during a protest calling on the British government to take action to protect the children of the Syrian city of Aleppo in London.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India