Cape Argus

Push to crack down on chemical weapons

Britain leads bid to halt attacks with banned toxic substances

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BRITAIN, which has condemned Russia over the nerve agent poisoning of an ex-spy, is pushing to give more teeth to the global chemical weapons watchdog so that it can identify those responsibl­e for attacks with banned toxic substances.

The 20-year-old Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which oversees a 1997 treaty banning the use of toxins as weapons, is a technical, scientific body which determines whether chemical weapons were used. But it does not have the authority to identify perpetrato­rs.

A British-led proposal, which is backed by Western powers including France, Germany and the US, but opposed by Russia, Iran and Syria, was to be debated at a special session of the OPCW yesterday.

The proposal would give the world body greater powers to assign responsibi­lity for violations of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

“Attributio­n goes beyond the mandate of the OPCW,” the Russian delegation said on Twitter. “The decision to create such a mechanism within the OPCW cannot be made at the special session being held in The Hague.”

The meeting was stalled for nearly three hours by procedural bickering, with Russia and its allies questionin­g the rules on voting rights until the US forced a vote to have the agenda adopted. It passed by a wide majority.

The draft proposal circulated by Britain would thrust the OPCW to the forefront of the diplomatic confrontat­ion between the West and Moscow which, has seen relations deteriorat­e to their lowest point since the Cold War.

Russia and Indonesia submitted rival proposals, but Western diplomats said they were not believed to have strong political backing.

It comes as OPCW inspectors prepare a report on an alleged poison attack in the Douma enclave near Damascus, Syria, in April that killed dozens and triggered air strikes by the US, France and Britain.

Western government­s have also blamed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Russia, which backs him, for using chemical weapons in the protracted Syrian conflict.

Both countries deny using chemical weapons.

Up to now it has fallen to the UN, where a joint OPCW-UN team, known as the Joint Investigat­ive Mechanism (JIM) was created in 2015, to identify individual­s or institutio­ns behind chemical weapons attacks in Syria.

The JIM confirmed that Syrian government troops used the nerve agent sarin and chorine barrel bombs on several occasions, while Islamic State militants were found to have used sulphur mustard.

But at a deadlocked UN Security Council, the JIM was disbanded last year after Moscow used its veto to block several resolution­s seeking to renew its mandate beyond November. The new British-led proposal, which so far has the support of 21 other states, comes after a steady increase since 2012 of the use of chemical weapons, mainly in the Syrian civil war, but also in Iraq, Malaysia and Britain.

“The widespread use of chemical weapons by Syria in particular threatens to undermine the treaty and the OPCW,” said Gregory Koblentz, a non-proliferat­ion expert at George Mason University, in the US state of Virginia.

“Empowering the OPCW to identify perpetrato­rs of chemical attacks is necessary to restoring the taboo against chemical weapons and the integrity of the chemical weapons disarmamen­t regime.”

The proposal is expected to be submitted by British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson on Tuesday in The Hague and voted on by OPCW members on Wednesday, sources said.

Decisions must win two-thirds of votes cast to be passed.

The British proposal condemns the use of nerve agent Novichok in the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal, the assassinat­ion with VX nerve agent in February last year of the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Malaysia and the use of sulphur mustard gas by Islamic State fighters in 2015 and 2016 in Syria and Iraq.

Under the British proposal, the text of which could change before it is voted on, the head of the OPCW would establish a body “with a view to facilitati­ng universal attributio­n” for attacks globally.

About 140 out of the 193 OPCW members had registered to participat­e in the conference, which could run until tomorrow.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? STAND: Abdelouaha­b Bellouki, Morocco’s ambassador to the Netherland­s and chairperso­n of the special session of the chemical weapons watchdog.
PICTURE: REUTERS STAND: Abdelouaha­b Bellouki, Morocco’s ambassador to the Netherland­s and chairperso­n of the special session of the chemical weapons watchdog.

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