The Scotsman

UK should act if chemical weapon use in Syria is proved

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

Britain should consider joining military action against Syrian president Bashar alassad’s regime if there is “incontrove­rtible” evidence he has used chemical weapons against his own people, Boris Johnson has said.

The Foreign Secretary said that while the West could not intervene to change the odds in favour of the rebels fighting the regime, he believed the use of illegal weapons should not go unpunished.

“It’s very important to recognise there’s no military solution that we in the West can now impose,” he told the BBC.

“The people listening to us, listeningt­othisprogr­ammein eastern Ghouta cannot get the idea that the West is going to intervene to change the odds dramatical­ly in their favour.

“But what I think we need to ask ourselves as a country, and I think what we in the West need to ask ourselves, is can we allow the use of chemical weapons, the use of these illegal weapons to go unreprieve­d, unchecked, unpunished? And I don’t think that we can.”

Mr Johnson’s comments came as a five-hour pause in the regime’s assault on the rebel-held enclave of eastern Ghouta, close to the capital Damascus, was beginning.

The respite was ordered by Mr Assad’s chief backer, Russia, which has said it would be repeated on a daily basis to allow civilians trapped by the fighting to leave.

However, it was later reported that no-one had managed

0 Children and adults are treated after a suspected chemical attack in eastern Ghouta, Syria to leave the besieged are during the “humanitari­an pause”.

On Saturday, the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution calling for a 30-day ceasefire, but it did not set a specific start date.

More than 500 people have been killed since last week in eastern Ghouta, where activists on Sunday reported a suspected poison gas attack.

Mr Johnson added: “If there is incontrove­rtible evidence of the use of chemical weapons, verified by the OPCW [Office of the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons] – if we know that it’s happened and we can demonstrat­e it, and if there is a proposal for action where the UK could be useful, then I think we should seriously consider it.”

Onmonday,mrjohnsons­aid he hopes the West “does not stand idly by” after the Labour MP John Woodcock said the bodies of victims “should be piled up in this chamber”.

In an urgent question to the Foreign Secretary, Mr Woodcock said: “The men and women of Ghouta who lie in pieces, deliberate­ly targeted by Assad’s Russia-enabled bombs, the dead children whose faces are altered by the chlorine gas that choked them.

“They should not be strewn in the rubble of Eastern Ghouta. Those bodies should be piled up in this chamber and lain at the feet of government­s of every single nation which continues to shrug in the face of this horror.”

Mr Johnson said the UK “missed our opportunit­y” to do something about the violence in Syria when MPS voted against airstrikes in 2013.

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