The Borneo Post

Iraq says no evidence of IS chemical weapons use in Mosul

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UNITED NATIONS, United States: Iraq’s UN envoy said there was no evidence that the Islamic State group had used chemical weapons in the battle for Mosul.

Ambassador Mohamed Alhakim said he conveyed the informatio­n to the United Nations after speaking with his government in Baghdad on Friday.

“There is really no evidence that Daesh has used this chemical weapon,” Alhakim told reporters ahead of a Security Council meeting on Iraq.

Daesh is the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State (IS).

The Red Cross had reported that seven people, five of them children, had been hospitalis­ed near Mosul in early March suffering from exposure to a chemical agent.

The US Defence Department said that IS militants were developing rudimentar­y chemical weapons such as mustard gas at the University of Mosul.

Iraqi forces launched an operation to retake west Mosul, the largest population centre still held by the jihadists, on Feb 19.

Alhakim said Iraq had been in contact with The Hague-based Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n for Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which could dispatch a team of experts in the event of a suspected toxic gas attack.

Following the closed-door Security Council meeting on Iraq, British Ambassador Matthew Rycroft said the Iraqi investigat­ion of the alleged chemical attacks had not been completed and that the council had expressed concern.

“We look forward to the results of Iraq’s investigat­ion into those allegation­s,” said Rycroft, who holds the council presidency this month. — AFP

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