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'Critical' Syria hands over last chemical agents: UN
by Staff Writers
United Nations, United States (AFP) June 04, 2014


A top UN official appealed on Syria Wednesday to hand over urgently all remaining chemical agents after missing a deadline for their destruction, and urged Damascus' allies to intervene.

Under a UN-backed and US-Russia brokered deal agreed last year after the United States threatened air strikes against Syrian government targets, the weapons were to be destroyed by June 30.

The deal was reached after a sarin nerve gas attack in a rebel-held Damascus suburb killed around 1,400 people.

But 7.2 percent of Syria's declared chemical agents, though packed, remain inside the country, Sigrid Kaag, the UN official overseeing the process, told reporters in New York.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon had already confirmed in a letter to the Security Council that the June deadline would not be met and Kaag urged compliance as soon as possible.

She heads a joint mission by the United Nations and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) to disassemble the weapons.

"We call on all member states to exercise their influence to ensure the immediate removal of the remaining chemicals," Kaag said after briefing the UN Security Council behind closed doors.

"The urgency, the time, the pressure to remove the remaining 7.2 percent is very, very critical and I'll be back in Damascus the next few days to pursue that conversation," she added.

Gripped by a brutal, three-year civil war, Syria claims that the security situation is too dangerous on the ground for the agents to be transported safely by road to the port of Latakia.

Asked if Syria was stalling, Kaag acknowledged security is a concern but warned: "It doesn't mean that additional delays can be incurred."

Danish and Norwegian ships are to take the chemicals from Latakia to a US ship for destruction at sea, as well as at sites in Finland, the US and Britain.

Kaag once again underlined that "significant progress" has been made in just nine months of the mission.

"Almost all of Syria's declared chemical weapons program, mixing and filing, the equipment, the mobile labs, the production facilities, storage sites as well as the removal of chemical weapons material, all that is no more," she said.

Western diplomats say the key question is how long the mission should continue.

They also await the outcome of a separate fact-finding mission into the regime's alleged ongoing use of chlorine gas.

The OPCW mission was dispatched after France and the United States alleged government forces may have unleashed industrial chemicals on a rebel-held village earlier this month.

Syria did not have to declare its stockpile of chlorine -- a weak toxic agent -- as part of the disarmament deal as it is widely used for commercial and domestic purposes.

The secretary general has said he wants the mission to work for a "finite period" after June 30 to eliminate the chemical agents.

Kaag said the mission would focus on "residual activities."

"We are reducing our footprint in Damascus because of security conditions but also we need different types of people," she said.

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