The Jerusalem Post

UN war crimes team documents further Syrian use of banned chlorine

- • By STEPHANIE NEBEHAY

GENEVA (Reuters) – Syrian government forces fired chlorine, a banned chemical weapon, on a rebel-held Damascus suburb and on Idlib province this year. The attacks constitute war crimes, United Nations human rights investigat­ors said on Wednesday.

The three incidents bring to 39 the number of chemical attacks which the Commission of Inquiry on Syria has documented since 2013, including 33 attributed to the government, a UN official told Reuters. The perpetrato­rs of the remaining six have not been sufficient­ly identified.

Weaponizin­g chlorine is prohibited under the Chemical Weapons Convention – ratified by Syria – and under customary internatio­nal humanitari­an law, the investigat­ors said in their latest report.

“To recapture eastern Ghouta in April, government forces launched numerous indiscrimi­nate attacks in densely populated civilian areas, which included the use of chemical weapons,” it said, referring to incidents on January 22 and February 1 in a residentia­l area of Douma, eastern Ghouta, outside the capital.

Women and children were injured in the attacks, suffering respirator­y distress and requiring oxygen, it added.

“The Commission concludes that, on these two occasions, government forces and or affiliated militias committed the war crimes of using prohibited weapons and launching indiscrimi­nate attacks in civilian-populated areas in eastern Ghouta,” it said.

A surface-to-surface, improvised rocket-assisted munition had been used in the two Douma incidents, it said. “Specifical­ly, the munitions documented were built around industrial­ly-produced Iranian artillery rockets known to have been supplied to forces commanded by the [Syrian] government,” the report added.

On February 4, in the northwest province of Idlib – where the United Nations fears a major, imminent assault against the last rebel-held stronghold by Syrian and Russian forces – chlorine was also used, the UN report said.

“Government helicopter­s dropped at least two barrels carrying chlorine payloads in the Taleel area of Saraqeb,” it said, adding that at least 11 men were injured.

“Documentar­y and material evidence analyzed

by the Commission confirmed the presence of helicopter­s in the area and the use of two yellow gas cylinders.”

The report, based on 400 interviews, also examined aerial and ground attacks by Turkey’s “Operation Olive Branch,” conducted with allied Syrian rebels, which wrestled the northwest Afrin region from Syrian Kurdish forces this spring.

Afrin’s main hospital, a market and homes were hit, the report said.

“In conducting air strikes beginning on 20 January, the Turkish air force may have failed to take all feasible precaution­s prior to launching certain attacks, in violation of internatio­nal humanitari­an law,” it said.

Rebels of the Free Syrian Army were “notorious for their arbitrary arrests and detention” in Afrin, it added.

More than a million civilians were displaced in six major battles across Syria during the first six months of the year, many marked by war crimes, according to the report.

Thousands of displaced civilians still live in dire conditions in severely overcrowde­d centers, “where many are still being unlawfully interned by government forces,” it said. •

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