Kuwait Times

Syria denies using chemical weapons

Damascus insists it’s cooperatin­g

- —AFP

THE HAGUE: Syria yesterday denied ever using chemical weapons in its four-year-old civil war, telling a global watchdog it was cooperatin­g fully with the destructio­n of its toxic stockpile. Damascus’s rebuttal comes amid growing accusation­s it is not being transparen­t with the world’s chemical watchdog and as United Nations efforts are stepped up to track down the perpetrato­rs of deadly chlorine gas attacks in the war-torn country last year.

“We wish here to state categorica­lly that we have never used chlorine or any other toxic chemicals during any incidents or any other operations in the Syrian Arab Republic since the beginning of the crisis and up to this very day,” Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Moqdad told the annual meeting of the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

Damascus rejected “the false accusation­s against Syria with respect to its supposed use of chlorine as a weapon in military operations,” he added, speaking in Arabic through an interprete­r. The accusation­s “only serve political agendas, which also aim at diverting our successes in eliminatin­g our chemical weapons,” Moqdad said.‘Many

Uncertaint­ies’

But Western countries including the United States and Canada, as well as the European Union, have lambasted Syria, raising doubts about whether President Bashar Al-Assad’s regime is truly committed to ridding his country of all chemical arms. There are “many uncertaint­ies regarding the dismantlin­g of Syria’s chemical weapons program, notably the gaps and contradict­ions contained in Syria’s declaratio­ns,” EU representa­tive Jacek Bylica told the meeting in The Hague, attended by delegates from the OPCW’s 192 states. “These uncertaint­ies lead to doubts as to compliance by Syria with its obligation­s under the Convention,” Bylica said at the opening of the five-day assembly. Last week the OPCW itself voiced “grave concern” at the continued use of toxic arms in Syria, despite the regime’s ratificati­on of the UN Convention banning chemical weapons. The OPCW investigat­ions did not directly blame any of the parties in the four-year civil war, aimed at ousting Assad and in which civil groups say more than 250,000 people have been killed.

French ambassador Laurent Pic told delegates some reports indicated the presence of helicopter­s at the time of chemical attacks. “We all know what that means: The pursuit of relentless oppression by any means, including the most abominable, by a criminal regime against its own people.”

Mustard Gas Attack

Accusation­s have also mounted that extremists with the Islamic State group, which has captured a swathe of territory in both Syria and Iraq, have resorted to such tactics. The OPCW - which won the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize - confirmed earlier in November with “utmost confidence” that mustard gas was used in Syria in August during fighting between rebels and jihadists, and “likely” killed a child. OPCW experts also concluded that chlorine gas was likely used in an attack in Idlib province in March.

OPCW director general Ahmet Uzumcu said a joint UN task team, approved by the Security Council in August to probe chlorine attacks in Syrian villages last year, was up and running in New York and in The Hague “with plans to set up in Damascus”. The panel, which comprises 24 experts, is expected to deliver its first report to the Security Council in February, Uzumcu said.

The watchdog’s top official told yesterday’s meeting “significan­t progress” had been made in destroying Syria’s declared chemical weapons stockpile. Under a deal hammered out in 2013 between Russia and the United States following a sarin gas attack on the outskirts of Damascus in which hundreds died, the regime joined the UN Convention against chemical weapons and pledged to hand over all such arms to the OPCW for destructio­n. Some 1,300 tonnes of chemical weapons were handed over by Syria, including mustard and sarin gas. The last of the stockpile will be destroyed in the United States by the end of the year, Uzumcu said. But Canadian ambassador Sabine Nolke said: “More than two years after acceding to this treaty, Syria has failed to demonstrat­e that it deserves treatment similar to that of any other ordinary member.”

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 ?? — AFP ?? DAMASCUS: Syrians walk in the Midhat Pasha Souq in old Damascus yesterday.
— AFP DAMASCUS: Syrians walk in the Midhat Pasha Souq in old Damascus yesterday.

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