The Jerusalem Post

EU targets officers for chemical attacks

- • By ROBIN EMMOTT

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The European Union imposed sanctions on Monday against four senior Syrian military officials accused of using chemical weapons on civilians, after Russia and China blocked similar measures at the United Nations.

The move marks the first time the EU has blackliste­d Syrian officials for the government’s alleged use of chlorine gas during the six-year conflict, although it previously accused one commander, Maj.-Gen. Tahir Hamid Khalil, of deploying chemical weapons as part of repressive tactics in 2013.

It has also targeted Syrian companies accused of manufactur­ing chemical weapons.

The four military officials, who the EU will name on Tuesday, will be banned from traveling to the European Union and will be unable to access any assets in the bloc or its banks, according to a statement by the European Union.

The EU measures take the number of people under its Syrian sanctions to 239, as well as 67 companies.

European Union sanctions also include an oil embargo, restrictio­ns on investment­s, a freeze of Syrian central bank assets held in the EU and a ban on exports of equipment and technology that could be used against civilians.

An investigat­ion by the United Nations and the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons found Syrian government forces were responsibl­e for three chlorine gas attacks and that Islamic State insurgents had used mustard gas, but Russians said that the results were inconclusi­ve.

In February, Russia and China blocked a bid by the United States, Britain and France at the UN to impose sanctions over the use of chemical weapons in the Syrian conflict, saying it would harm peace talks.

The United States had already blackliste­d 18 officials in January over the chemical weapons accusation­s.

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