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'Syria used chemical weapons in 2018 attack'

By AFP - Apr 13,2021 - Last updated at Apr 13,2021

THE HAGUE — The Syrian army used the chemical weapon chlorine in an attack on the town of Saraqib in 2018, the global toxic arms watchdog said on Monday after an investigation.

The report is the second by an investigations team set up by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which has the new power to apportion blame for attacks.

The OPCW said in a statement that the Investigations and Identification Team (IIT) "concludes that units of the Syrian Arab Air Force used chemical weapons in Saraqib on February 4, 2018".

"There are reasonable grounds to believe that, at approximately 21:22 on February 4, 2018, a military helicopter of the Syrian Arab Air Force under the control of the Tiger Forces hit eastern Saraqib by dropping at least one cylinder," the OPCW report said.

“The cylinder ruptured and released chlorine over a large area, affecting 12 named individuals.”

OPCW investigators interviewed 30 witnesses, analysed samples collected at the scene, reviewed symptoms reported by victims and medical staff and examined satellite imagery to reach their conclusions, The Hague-based organisation said.

“Symptoms... included shortness of breath, skin irritation, chest pain, and coughing,” the report said.

However it said it “regrets” that the Syrian government refused to grant access to the site, some 48 kilometres south of Aleppo, despite repeated requests.

Syria has continued to deny the use of chemical weapons and insists it has handed over its weapons stockpiles under a 2013 agreement, prompted by a suspected sarin attack that killed 1,400 people in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta.

But OPCW investigators said they believed that orders for the 2018 Saraqib attack must have come from above, and that there was no indication that “rogue elements or individuals” were responsible.

“The IIT obtained information from various sources suggesting that, for chemical weapons to be used in the manner described above, orders would be required,” the full report on the attack said.

While it had not identified a “specific chain of command”, the Syrian military general command appeared to have “delegated decisions on the use of chlorine to “operational level commanders”, the OPCW said.

OPCW states will vote later this month on whether to impose sanctions on Syria, including the suspension of its voting rights in the organisation, over its failure to comply with its rules.

The OPCW’s governing body has told Syria it must declare all details about the facilities used to produce the sarin and chlorine used in the 2017 attacks.

Western powers have expressed concern that Damascus has failed to declare and destroy all its chemical weapons under the 2013 deal.

The OPCW chief said in March there were still gaps and inconsistencies in Syria’s reports to the body.

The United Nations said in March that Damascus had for years failed to reply to a series of 19 questions about its weapons installations, which could have been used to stock or produce chemical weapons.

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