Gulf News

‘Russia breaking chemical arms ban’

BRITISH ENVOY SAYS MOSCOW’S ‘RECKLESS’ BEHAVIOUR IN SPY POISONING CASE THREATENS GLOBAL SECURITY

- THE HAGUE

Britain accused Russia yesterday of breaking the two-decade internatio­nal ban on chemical weapons at emergency talks into last month’s poisoning with a nerve agent of a former Russian spy.

The accusation­s came as diplomats from the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons met behind closeddoor­s in The Hague to discuss the case. Experts from the watchdog last week confirmed the British findings that former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter had been poisoned with a nerve agent.

“We will continue to call out Russia’s reckless and indiscrimi­nate behaviour when it violates the CWC (Chemical Weapons Convention), and when it threatens global security,” British ambassador Peter Wilson said.

“Russia has a proven record of conducting state-sponsored assassinat­ion,” he claimed, according to a tweet from the British delegation to the OPCW.

“It is highly likely that the Russian intelligen­ce services view at least some of its defectors as legitimate targets for assassinat­ion,” Wilson said.

It was the second meeting of The Hague-based body’s executive council in three days, and was called by Britain to discuss the probe into the poisoning of Skripal and his daughter last month in the British town of

Salisbury.

Founded in 1997, the OPCW oversees the applicatio­n of The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) aimed at eliminatin­g the world’s stockpiles of toxic arms.

After deploying its experts to Salisbury, the OPCW last week confirmed in a report “the findings of the United Kingdom relating to the identity of the toxic chemical”.

‘No plausible alternativ­e’

It did not however publicly name the substance or its origins, which Britain says was a Novichok nerve agent of the sort first developed in the Soviet Union in the 1970s.

Moscow has vehemently denied the allegation­s, and in a tweet by the Russian embassy to the Netherland­s mocked the British statements.

“No plausible alternativ­e, highly likely (twice), it is likely that, strong probabilit­y, probably, may have been, may have — that is the wording again used by the delegation at the @ OPCW. What a depth of argumentat­ion!,” it said.

The Salisbury crisis, coupled with Russian support for its ally Syria after accusation­s of illicit toxic weapons being used on civilians in its civil war, has sent already-frayed relations between Moscow and the West plummeting to new lows.

On Monday, the OPCW’s governing executive council also met in closed-session to discuss a dangerous mission by its inspectors to the Syrian town of Douma to probe allegation­s of a chemical chlorine and sarin gas attack on April 7. The mission, due to get underway later yesterday, has been hit by delays, amid fears from Western powers that crucial evidence has already likely been removed.

London said meanwhile on Tuesday that the nerve agent substance used in Salisbury had been delivered in “liquid form” and in small quantities.

A meticulous clean-up has now begun in Salisbury, and the town’s cemetery where Skripal’s wife and son are buried was reopened on Tuesday.

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