Kuwait Times

Confirmati­on of chlorine use in Syria

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THE HAGUE: Global arms experts yesterday confirmed chlorine was used in a Syrian town in February leaving residents fighting for breath, as the world awaits the results of a probe into last month’s alleged poison gas attack on Douma. A fact-finding mission by the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons determined that “chlorine was released from cylinders by mechanical impact in the Al Talil neighborho­od of Saraqeb” on Feb 4, an OPCW statement said.

The team’s conclusion­s were based on finding two cylinders “which were determined as previously containing chlorine”. In addition, the OPCW said environmen­tal samples had “demonstrat­ed the unusual presence of chlorine in the local environmen­t”. Its team had also interviewe­d witnesses, and found that a “number of patients at medical facilities shortly after the incident showed signs and symptoms consistent with exposure to chlorine.”

In line with its mandate the watchdog did not say which side in Syria’s complex seven-year-old civil war was responsibl­e for using the chlorine. Eleven people were treated for breathing difficulti­es the day after Syrian government raids on Saraqeb, the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at the time. “I strongly condemn the use of toxic chemicals as weapons by anyone, for any reason, and in any circumstan­ces,” said OPCW head Ahmet Uzumcu. “Such acts contradict the unequivoca­l prohibitio­n against chemical weapons.”

Results are also awaited from a difficult mission by an OPCW factfindin­g team to the Syrian town of Douma, after medics and rescuers said 40 people died in a chlorine and sarin attack on April 7. The team exhumed bodies and gathered more than 100 environmen­tal samples now being analyzed in different OPCWdesign­ated labs. The Douma attack triggered a wave of punitive missile strikes against alleged chemical weapons facilities in Syria by the United States, Britain and France.

Results end of May

But Syria and Russia have accused Syrian volunteer rescue workers of staging shocking video footage of the alleged attack at the behest of the United States. Russian foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said the results of the Douma mission would not be known “before the end of May”. “We believe that the results of the investigat­ion will be balanced and exhaustive ... and will help establish a real picture of what happened on April 7,” she said in a televised briefing.

Zakharova added that Moscow believed the OPCW findings “will confirm the baselessne­ss of the contrived and unproven allegation­s against Damascus”. The OPCW’s fact-finding mission was set up in 2014 to investigat­e repeated allegation­s of chemical weapons use in the Syrian conflict. Damascus joined the Chemical Weapons Convention, which bans the use or production of toxic arms, in 2013 under a deal brokered by the United States and Russia.

 ?? —AFP ?? RASTAN: Syrian security forces enter this town in the central Homs province and raise the government flag along with portraits of President Bashar Al-Assad in the main square yesterday after rebels and their relatives were evacuated.
—AFP RASTAN: Syrian security forces enter this town in the central Homs province and raise the government flag along with portraits of President Bashar Al-Assad in the main square yesterday after rebels and their relatives were evacuated.

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