Millennium Post

Syria’s chemical weapons won’t be ignored: Johnson

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LONDON: Global powers will not "turn a blind eye" to the use of of chemical weapons, the UK foreign secretary has warned a day after Us-led strikes in Syria, according to a BBC News report said.

Writing in the Telegraph, Boris Johnson said countries should know President Assad has not "got away with it".

It comes after Downing Street published its legal case for its part in the strikes, which targeted military bases.

Sites near Damascus and Homs were hit in response to an alleged chemical attack on the town of Douma.

Mr Johnson described the use of toxic weapons as "vile, sick and barbaric" adding it was a "pattern" of behaviour from the Syrian regime. He said Western powers had tried "countless resolution­s" at the UN to deter the use of chemical warfare saying it had become an "effective global taboo".

The UK believes the Assad regime was responsibl­e for the attack on civilians on 7 April, while the US and France say they have proof. But Syria has always denied any chemical use and says the attack was fabricated by rebels.

Mr Johnson added: "We are standing up for principle and for civilised values. We may not end the barbarism - but we are telling the world that there is one type of barbarism that is banned and that deserves to be banned."

Prime Minister Theresa May will address Parliament on Monday about the air strikes on Syria. Some party leaders have argued MPS should have been consulted before the strikes.

Labour's Jeremy Corbyn criticised the decision to strike, calling it "legally questionab­le".

But Conservati­ve Party deputy chairman James Cleverly said there was a "well establishe­d legal framework" to prevent "a humanitari­an catastroph­e".

He said Parliament may not have been consulted because intelligen­ce used to make the decision "cannot be put in the public domain". He added the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) believe the Assad regime had used chemical weapons in the past, and credible intelligen­ce showed an "ability and willingnes­s to do so in the future".

"This was about preventing a humanitari­an catastroph­e," he told BBC Breakfast.

The UK and US have said the strike was successful, with President Trump warning of further action if there are more chemical attacks.

Syrian state media has said it was "a flagrant violation of internatio­nal law", while ally Russia's President Vladimir Putin condemned it "in the most serious way".

On Saturday, the UN Security Council rejected a resolution drafted by Russia while all Nato allies have given the military action their full support. There has been no confirmati­on of any civilian casualties.

The Ministry of Defence said eight Storm Shadow missiles had been launched by four RAF Tornados at a former missile base, 15 miles west of Homs.

It is thought President Bashar alAssad's regime had been stockpilin­g materials used to make chemical weapons there, it said. A spokespers­on added the facility was located "some distance" from "concentrat­ions of civilian habitation", and the risk of contaminat­ion to the surroundin­g area had been minimised. PARIS: French Foreign Minister Jean-yves Le Drian warned on Sunday that a new humanitari­an disaster was looming in Syria, in the rebel-held region of Idlib, seen as the next possible target of the regime's fightback.

In an interview with Le Journal du Dimanche weekly a day after the US, Britain and France carried out strikes in Syria, Le Drian said: "There are 2 million people in Idlib now, including hundreds of thousands of Syrians evacuated from rebel towns recaptured by the regime."

"There is a risk of a new humanitari­an disaster."

Held by an array of jihadists and rebels, Idlib province is the last in Syria largely beyond government control.

Speaking in Damascus this week, a senior Iranian official said he hoped Idlib would be the next area to be "liberated" by Iran ally President Bashar al-assad, after the Syrian army's recapture of the Eastern Ghouta region near Damascus with Russian backing.

 ??  ?? A Syrian soldier films the damage of the Syrian Scientific Research Center which was attacked by US, British and French military strikes to punish President Bashar Assad for suspected chemical attack against civilians, in Barzeh, near Damascus, Syria,...
A Syrian soldier films the damage of the Syrian Scientific Research Center which was attacked by US, British and French military strikes to punish President Bashar Assad for suspected chemical attack against civilians, in Barzeh, near Damascus, Syria,...

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