UN chemical weapons inspectors take Syria samples for tests

Updated - November 16, 2021 09:20 pm IST - United Nations

In this photo released on August 31, 2013, by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, samples brought back by the U.N. chemical weapons inspection team are checked in upon their arrival at The Hague, Netherlands.

In this photo released on August 31, 2013, by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, samples brought back by the U.N. chemical weapons inspection team are checked in upon their arrival at The Hague, Netherlands.

U.N. inspectors have conducted “a wide range of fact-finding activities” at the site of an alleged chemical attack outside the Syrian capital city of Damascus, a U.N. official said.

The U.N. inspectors have taken the samples to The Hague and these will be moved to two laboratories in Europe, Xinhua cited U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky as saying on Saturday.

U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Angela Kane was sent to Syria to negotiate a U.N. probe into the alleged August 21 chemical attack and she met U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon thereafter.

Mr. Nesirky, however, added that there could be no report on whether banned poison gas had been used until laboratory tests are completed.

The spokesman vowed that the U.N. inspectors will conduct “impartial and credible” assessments on whether chemical weapons were used in the Syrian conflict, which has been going on for 29 months.

Ms. Kane assured Mr. Ban that “whatever can be done to speed up the process (of analysing evidence gathered in Syria) is being done” now that the U.N. chemical weapons team has returned to the Netherlands, he said.

When the U.N. experts complete their samples study, the U.N. chief would share the information with U.N. member states and the Security Council, he said.

However, he refused to give a timeline about the process of samples assessment.

Mr. Ban, who cut short his European tour to be briefed on the U.N. investigations, also talked Saturday over the phone with Ake Sellstrom, the Swedish head of the U.N. group of about 10 inspectors, shortly after they arrived in the Netherlands, said the spokesman.

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