The Star Malaysia

Leaders vow tougher action on chemical weapons, spying

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BRUSSELS: EU leaders pledged to crack down harder on chemical weapons and step up efforts to combat spying, as Europe frets about threats from Russia.

Three months after a nerve agent attack in the British city of Salisbury, blamed on Russia, united the EU in condemnati­on of Moscow, the bloc’s leaders said they wanted new measures to stop the spread of chemical weapons.

A summit of EU leaders called for “the adoption as soon as possible of a new EU regime of restrictiv­e measures to address the use and proliferat­ion of chemical weapons”.

The call came a day after the internatio­nal community voted to beef up the powers of the world chemical weapons watchdog, allowing it to name those responsibl­e for toxic arms attacks in Syria.

The Salisbury attack, along with repeated gas attacks in Syria’s bloody civil war and the assassinat­ion of North Korea leader Kim Jongun’s half brother using VX nerve agent in Malaysia, have led to fears that the century-old taboo against chemical weapons was being eroded.

The European Commission, the EU’s powerful executive arm, said Wednesday’s decision to boost the powers of the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was a “crucial step towards preserving and upholding the global norm against the use of chemical weapons”.

And with European nations increasing­ly anxious about Russian interferen­ce in elections across the continent, the summit tasked the commission with coming up with “a coordinate­d EU response to the challenge of disinforma­tion”. — AFP

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