Syria's declared chemical arms '100% destroyed', says watchdog

The Hague - The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons says the process closes an important chapter in the elimination of Syria's chemical weapon programme.

By AFP


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Published: Tue 5 Jan 2016, 7:58 PM

Last updated: Tue 5 Jan 2016, 10:07 PM

Syria's declared chemical weapons arsenal has been completely destroyed capping more than two years of work, a global arms watchdog said on Tuesday, amid concern sarin gas is still being unleashed in the country's complex civil war.
The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) - which oversaw the dangerous removal and elimination of Syria's avowed stockpile - has for months been warning of the continued use of mustard, sarin and chlorine gas in the brutal conflict.
But it has avoided blaming either the regime of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad, the rebels or the Daesh group for the use of the weapons banned under international law.
After years of denials, the regime caved to international pressure in September 2013 and agreed under a US-Russia deal to hand over its toxic stockpile to the OPCW for destruction.
The admission came after a sarin gas attack in August that year on rebel-held areas near Damascus that was blamed by the West and the opposition on the regime. Hundreds of civilians were killed.
The removal of the weapons was the result of a historic deal which averted threatened US air strikes against Damascus after the August attacks.
"One hundred per cent has been destroyed," Malik Ellahi, the OPCW spokesman, said on Tuesday.
With the UN Security Council poised to discuss the chemical weapons issue on Tuesday, OPCW director general Ahmet Uzumcu said: "This process closes an important chapter in the elimination of Syria's chemical weapon programme."
But he acknowledged the organisation based in The Hague was still continuing "efforts to clarify Syria's declaration and address ongoing use of toxic chemicals as weapons in that country."
In a separate report released on Monday after being sent to the Security Council last week, the watchdog said it was investigating 11 incidents reported by the Syrian government in which people may have been exposed to sarin or sarin-like gas.
"Further investigation would be necessary to determine when or under what circumstances such exposure might have occurred," the report said.
Previous fact-finding missions by the OPCW in Syria have pointed to the use of chlorine and mustard gas.
Both the regime and Daesh group have been accused of using chemical weapons in the war, although it remains unclear where the arms have come from.
Under the terms of a deal hammered out in Geneva in September 2013 by US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, Syria finally admitted to possessing over 1,000 tonnes of chemical weapons and agreed to hand them over for destruction.
Under the agreement, Syria's entire chemical arsenal had been due to be eliminated by June 30, 2014, and all chemical effluent by December 31, 2014.
But the timetable slipped badly amid protractions by the Assad regime and complications posed by the nearly five-year civil war which has claimed more than 250,000 lives.
The last remaining vestiges of the regime's declared stockpile - some 75 cylinders of highly-corrosive hydrogen fluoride - were destroyed by the US firm Veolia at its treatment plant Port Arthur in Texas, the OPCW said.


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