Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Chemical weapons watchdog OPCW to decide on Syria sanctions

- ANKARA / DAILY SABAH

THE GLOBAL chemical weapon watchdog will this week decide whether to impose sanctions on Syria after it confirmed that the Bashar Assad regime used chlorine gas in a 2018 attack on an opposition region.

Member states of the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) will weigh a French proposal to suspend Syria’s “rights and privileges” at the body, including its ability to vote.

Damascus is accused of failing to answer key questions after an OPCW probe last year found Syria attacked an opposition-held village with the nerve agent sarin and the toxic chemical chlorine in 2017.

“Syria’s refusal to faithfully deliver the requested informatio­n cannot and must not remain unanswered,” the European Union said in a joint statement to the United Nations last week.

“It is now up to the internatio­nal community to take appropriat­e action.”

If approved by the meeting of the OPCW’s 193 member states at its headquarte­rs in The Hague, it would be the first time the watchdog has used its maximum available punishment.

The three-day meeting opened yesterday and diplomatic sources told Agence FrancePres­se (AFP) that the vote is expected today or tomorrow.

Syria has rejected all the allegation­s and said the attacks were staged.

Damascus and its ally Moscow have accused Western powers of using the OPCW for a “politicize­d” campaign against them.

Syria agreed in 2013 to join the OPCW and give up all chemical weapons, following a suspected sarin attack that killed 1,400 people in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta.

But an OPCW investigat­ion found in April last year that the Syrian air force was responsibl­e for sarin and chlorine bombings on the village of Latamneh in 2017.

Damascus then failed to comply with a 90day deadline by the OPCW’s governing body to declare the weapons used in the attacks and reveal its remaining stocks.

France in response submitted a motion backed by 46 countries calling for the regulator to freeze Syria’s rights at the watchdog. Criticism grows

Pressure mounted on Syria last week after a second investigat­ion released by the OPCW found that it had also carried out a chlorine bomb attack on the opposition-held town of Saraqib in 2018.

World powers sparred at the U.N. last week over the issue.

“I say this with gravity, it is time for the Syrian regime to be held accountabl­e,” Nicolas

de Riviere, the French Ambassador to the U.N., told the world body last week.

“I call on all states, parties to the Chemical Weapons Convention to support this draft decision.”

Turkey also urged the world to hold Assad accountabl­e for the Saraqib attack while the United States said that the attack came as no surprise.

According to the U.N., Damascus has not replied to a series of questions about its weapons installati­ons for years, which could have been used to stock or produce chemical weapons.

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