Chattanooga Times Free Press

Investigat­ion finds Syria likely behind chlorine attack

- BY MIKE CORDER

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s — An investigat­ion by the global chemical weapons watchdog found “reasonable grounds to believe” that a Syrian air force military helicopter dropped a chlorine cylinder on a Syrian town in 2018, sickening 12 people, the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons said Monday.

It is the second time that the OPCW’s Investigat­ion and Identifica­tion Team has concluded that Syrian government armed forces likely were responsibl­e for a gas attack. Last year, the team also found reasonable grounds to believe that the Syrian Arab Air Force was responsibl­e for attacks using chlorine and the nerve agent sarin in March 2017 in the town of Latamneh.

Syria has repeatedly been accused of using chemical weapons during the country’s grinding civil war. The government of President Bashar Assad denies the claims.

In the latest report, the OPCW investigat­ion team said it found evidence that a military helicopter belonging to the Tiger Forces of the Syrian air force dropped at least one chlorine cylinder on the rebel-held northern Syrian town of Saraqeb on Feb. 4, 2018.

“The cylinder ruptured and released chlorine over a large area, affecting 12 named individual­s,” the watchdog said in a statement. Those affected all survived, the report said.

As part of the investigat­ion, experts interviewe­d witnesses, analyzed samples and remnants collected from the town as well reviewing symptoms reported by casualties and studying satellite imagery and modeling gas dispersion patterns.

The OPCW can’t hold individual­s criminally responsibl­e for attacks. The report will be shared with the organizati­on’s member states and the United Nations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States