The Province

Weapons inspectors get into site of alleged Syrian chemical attack

- Louisa Loveluck

BEIRUT — Weapons inspectors on Saturday entered the Syrian city of Douma, where a suspected poison gas attack two weeks earlier killed at least 43 people and prompted U.S.led airstrikes against Syrian military facilities.

After a week of delays, the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said it had visited one of two alleged blast sites in the city to collect samples that will now be analyzed in the Netherland­s.

In a statement, the organizati­on said that it would consider a second visit to Douma, where residents and doctors present on the night of the April 7 attack have said that the air filled with the smell of chlorine. Video footage and eyewitness testimonie­s suggest that some of the victims died foaming at the mouth, a symptom that could indicate exposure to a nerve agent.

The United States, France and the United Kingdom responded to the attack with airstrikes on facilities linked to Syrian President Bashar Assad’s chemical weapons program and demanded an immediate and independen­t investigat­ion into what caused such a high number of deaths in Douma.

But rather than head straight for the site, the OPCW team was forced to sit in Damascus for much of the past week, leading the United States and France to accuse Syria and its Russian allies of attempting to delay the inspection as they sanitized the alleged blast sites.

On Thursday, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian blamed the time lapse on “obstructio­nism” by Syrian and Russian authoritie­s who control the site.

Russia, which controls much of the city through its military police, rejected that accusation Saturday. “We are calling on our Western colleagues to come to reason and refrain from actions that obstruct the establishm­ent of the truth about the April 7 provocatio­n,” Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Maria Zakharova said in a statement.

She said Moscow expected an “impartial investigat­ion” and a “prompt release of an objective report.”

Russia has rejected earlier internatio­nal probes into the use of chemical weapons by Assad.

The nature of the chemical weapons allegedly used in Douma remains unclear, and open-source video and photograph­ic evidence has appeared to suggest that one may have involved a more toxic mix than previous attacks.

The inspectors’ report is highly anticipate­d. Despite reports of the deaths from Douma, Syrian and Russian state television have aired testimonie­s from local doctors and alleged victims denying a chemical attack took place.

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