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Home News Middle East

Syria to face sanctions from chemical weapons watchdog

Damascus rejects claims by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons over Lataminah attack in 2017, including the use of sarin gas.

by  News Agencies and ILH Staff
Published on  04-21-2021 05:56
Last modified: 04-21-2021 05:56
Syria to face sanctions from chemical weapons watchdogAP via the Local Committee of Arbeen

Members of the UN investigation team take samples from sand near a part of a missile that is likely to be a chemical rocket, in the Damascus countryside of Ain Terma, Syria, Aug. 28, 2013 | File photo: AP via the Local Committee of Arbeen

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The world's chemical weapons watchdog will decide this week whether to impose unprecedented sanctions on Syria for its alleged use of toxic arms and failure to declare its chemical arsenal.

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According to French news agency AFP, Member states of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) will weigh a French proposal to suspend Syria's "rights and privileges" at the body, including its ability to vote.

Damascus is accused of failing to answer key questions after an OPCW probe last year found Syria attacked a rebel-held village with the nerve agent sarin and the toxic chemical chlorine in 2017.

"Syria's refusal to faithfully deliver the requested information cannot and must not remain unanswered," the European Union said in a joint statement to the United Nations last week.

"It is now up to the international community to take appropriate action."

If approved by the meeting of the OPCW's 193 member states at its headquarters in The Hague, it would be the first time the watchdog has used its maximum available punishment.

Syria has rejected all the allegations and said the attacks were staged.

Damascus and its ally Moscow have accused Western powers of using the OPCW for a "politicized" campaign against them.

Syria agreed in 2013 to join the OPCW and give up all chemical weapons, following a suspected sarin attack that killed 1,400 people in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta.

But an OPCW investigation found in April last year that the Syrian air force was responsible for sarin and chlorine bombings on the village of Lataminah in 2017.

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Damascus then failed to comply with a 90-day deadline by the OPCW's governing body to declare the weapons used in the attacks and reveal its remaining stocks.

i24NEWS contributed to this report.

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