The Scotsman

Watchdog confirms chlorine gas used in attack on Syrian town

● US accused Assad regime of chemical weapons use in February

- By MIKE CORDER at The Hague

was probably used as a weapon in the Syrian town of Saraqeb in early February, according to the internatio­nal chemical weapons watchdog.

The Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons released details in its latest report on poison gas being unleashed in Syria’s civil war. However, the OPCW is not mandated to apportion blame for the attack.

The organisati­on said its fact-finding mission investigat­ing alleged use of chemical weapons in Syria “determined that chlorine was released from cylinders by mechanical impact in the Al Talil neighbourh­ood of Saraqib”.

The mission is also investigat­ing allegation­s that poi- son gas was used in Douma, near the capital Damascus, in a deadly 7 April attack. It has not yet issued a report on that incident.

On 4 February, the White Helmets search and rescue group and a medical charity reported that several people suffered breathing difficulti­es after a suspected chlorine gas attack on Saraqeb, days after the Trump administra­tion accused Syrian president Bashar al-assad’s government of producing and using “new kinds of weapons” to deliver poisonous gases.

Damascus denied the White House’s charges.

The White Helmets said three of its rescuers and six other people suffered breathing problems. The Syrian American Medical Society said its hospitals in Idlib treated 11 patients for suspected chlorine gas poisoning.

OPCW director-general Ahmet Uzumcu harshly criticised the chemical attack, saying: “I strongly condemn the continued use of toxic chemicals as weapons by any-one for any reason, and in any circumstan­ces.

“Such acts contradict the unequivoca­l prohibitio­n against chemical weapons enshrined in the Chemical Weapons Convention.”

The OPCW said its team based its findings on evidence including“the presence of two cylinders, which were determined as previously containing chlorine; witness testimony; environmen­tal samples that demonstrat­ed the unusual presence of chlorine in the local environmen­t; and the number of patients at medical facilities shortly after the incident who showed signs and symptoms consistent with exposure to chlorine and other toxic chemicals”.

Saraqeb is in the northern Idlib province, a stronghold for rebels and opposition to Mr Assad’s government. The province is also home to militants linked to al-qaeda.

The town has come under suspected chemical attacks at least twice before, in 2016 and in 2013.

An attack on Douma last month led to the US, France and Britain blaming the Syri- an government and launching joint punitive air strikes targeting suspected Syrian chemical weapons facilities on 15 April. The organisati­on has not yet issued a report on that attack.

Mr Assad’s forces have repeatedly been accused of using chemical weapons in the long-running civil war. His regime denies the allegation­s.

Rebels have also been accused of using poison gas.

Meanwhile, two people were killed and 19 others injured when a shell fell in the heart of the Syrian capital, Syrian state TV reported yesterday, stating it was fired by “terrorist groups”.

Damascus police said the shell – which landed near Victoria bridge in central Damascus – also caused damage.

Even though government troops have nearly gained full control of areas surroundin­g the capital from rebel forces, they are still battling remnants of Islamic State militants south of Damascus.

For years, the capital has seen repeated shelling from Damascus suburbs.

 ??  ?? 0 People were treated for breathing difficulti­es after the attack
0 People were treated for breathing difficulti­es after the attack

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