Toronto Star

UN Security Council OK’s new type of chemical weapons investigat­ive body

- CARA ANNA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The UN Security Council is approving a groundbrea­king internatio­nal investigat­ive body that will be allowed to establish who is responsibl­e for chemical attacks in Syria for the first time, a diplomat said Thursday.

Until now, the UN and the global chemical weapons watchdog, the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, were able to investigat­e attacks but could not lay blame on the government or rebels.

The new body is the result of rare co-operation between the United States and Russia on Syria’s conflict, which is well into its fifth year.

No council member objected to a letter sent Thursday to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in support of the UN-OPCW joint investigat­ive mechanism.

In a statement, Ban’s spokesman welcomed the approval and stressed “the speedy establishm­ent and full functionin­g” of the investigat­ive body.

The letter, obtained by The Associated Press, is signed by Russian ambassador and current council president Vitaly Churkin and authorizes Ban’s recommenda­tions for a three-member independen­t panel be backed by experts with the freedom to go anywhere in Syria to identify those responsibl­e for attacks.

Syria’s government denies using chemical weapons, but the U.S. and other western countries contend it is to blame, especially for barrel bombs containing chlorine and other toxic agents dropped by helicopter­s. The opposition doesn’t have aircraft.

Reports also have surfaced in recent months that the Islamic State group has used toxic chemicals.

Last month, the council unanimousl­y approved a resolution giving a green light to establish the internatio­nal body, which would operate for one year with the possibilit­y of extensions.

UN disarmamen­t chief Kim Wonsoo on Wednesday acknowledg­ed that “access will be a very challengin­g issue,” especially with the Islamic State group controllin­g a large part of Syria.

Kim also said the investigat­ive body is expected to begin its work within weeks. One of the next steps is updating a co-operation agreement with the Syrian government, but “I don’t expect a serious problem” there, he said.

The investigat­ive body is expected to submit its first report within 90 days of being fully operationa­l.

 ?? MOHAMAD ZEEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? A man breathes with an oxygen mask in March at a clinic in a Syrian village after an alleged chemical attack.
MOHAMAD ZEEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO A man breathes with an oxygen mask in March at a clinic in a Syrian village after an alleged chemical attack.

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