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WAR REPORT
Last dangerous chemicals shipped from Syria: watchdog
by Staff Writers
The Hague (AFP) June 23, 2014


Russia hails 'successful' shipping of chemicals out of Syria
Moscow (AFP) June 23, 2014 - Russia on Monday hailed the "successful" completion of an international mission to ship chemical agents out of Syria, under a US-Russia brokered agreement that helped avert the threat of Western air strikes.

"Russia greets the successful end of a large-scale and unprecedented international operation to ship all components of chemical weapons and their precursors out of Syria with deep satisfaction," the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and US leader Barack Obama discussed the end of the UN-backed mission to rid Syria of all declared chemical weapons in a phone call on Monday evening, the Kremlin said separately.

The foreign ministry said for its part that some 1,200 tonnes of chemicals had been taken out of Syria, praising Damascus for exhibiting "political will" and cooperating with the global community.

It said Syria "has been able to carry out a unique operation", unprecedented in the 17-year history of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and the convention on chemical weapons.

"In the spirit of strategic partnership Russian and Chinese naval forces in cooperation with Danish and Norwegian military vessels had over the past six months ensured the safety of a sea phase of the operation to take toxic chemical weapons out of the Syrian port of Latakia," the statement said.

Under the final stage of the mission, the weapons should now be destroyed on board a US ship as well as in Britain, it added.

Last year, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's key ally Russia came forward with a surprise proposal for Damascus to hand over its chemical weapons under international control and have them destroyed.

The proposal has helped avert threatened US military action but was slammed by critics as a political manoeuvre that would waste time and cause more deaths.

The world's chemical watchdog confirmed earlier Monday that the last of Syria's declared chemical agents had been shipped from the war-torn country.

The last of Syria's declared chemical agents have been shipped from the war-torn country after months of delays and are en route for destruction at sea, the world's chemical watchdog said on Monday.

"As we speak, the ship (carrying the last chemicals) has just left the port (of Latakia)," Ahmet Uzumcu, head of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, told journalists in The Hague where the OPCW is based.

"Removing the stockpile of precursor and other chemicals has been a fundamental condition in the programme to eliminate Syria's chemical weapons," Uzumcu said.

The Dutch head of the joint OPCW-UN mission, Sigrid Kaag, hailed the end of "the most operationally challenging task" in the international efforts to destroy Damascus' chemical arsenal.

Syria had previously shipped out 92 percent of its stockpile of chemical weapons under the terms of a UN-backed and US-Russia brokered agreement to head off Western air strikes against the regime last year.

But Damascus delayed shipping the remaining eight percent of the stockpile from another site, citing security concerns over transporting it to the port of Latakia.

"While a major chapter in our endeavours closes today, OPCW's work in Syria will continue," Uzumcu said.

"We hope to conclude soon the clarification of certain aspects of the Syrian declaration and commence the destruction of certain structures that were used as chemical-weapons production facilities."

The Syrian foreign ministry confirmed in a statement that "the final cargo of chemical agents has today been taken outside Syrian territory".

The ministry hailed the success of the mission and called on the international community to pressure Syria's arch-foe Israel to sign up to international agreements on weapons of mass destruction.

Russia's foreign minister meanwhile voiced "deep satisfaction" at what it hailed as "the successful end of a large-scale and unprecedented international operation."

Kaag said technical experts from The Hague, the joint mission and the Syrian authorities would continue to investigate "the completeness of Syria's initial declaration to the OPCW".

"Any state party when they accede to the chemical weapons convention... we look at anomalies, we look at discrepancies in cooperation," Kaag told AFP.

"The most important thing is that the materials are out. They will be destroyed safely and securely... out of harm's way, and they can also no longer fall into the wrong hands."

- Chlorine questions -

Syria was supposed to hand over its chemical arsenal so the international community could destroy it by the end of June, but it has been widely acknowledged it would pass that deadline.

"While the June 30 deadline, as already was stated a few weeks ago, will not be met... the materials are out of the country and the bulk of Syria's declared chemical weapons programme is no more," said Kaag.

The deal was reached after the US threatened to carry out air strikes against President Bashar al-Assad's regime following a sarin nerve gas attack in a rebel-held suburb in Damascus killed around 1,400 people.

A Danish ship will now take the chemicals to Italy's port of Gioia Tauro where they will be transferred to the US ship Cape Ray for destruction at sea. Some are also due to be destroyed in the US, Britain and Finland.

OPCW spokesman Michael Luhan told AFP that the Danish vessel would arrive in Italy "within a week". Uzumcu confirmed that once they have been transferred to the US vessel it could take up to 60 days to destroy them.

"Within the next four months most chemicals will be destroyed," he said, adding that Damascus' cooperation has been "commensurate with the requirements" of the deal.

His words contrast with news from an OPCW investigation team, which last week said chemical agents such as chlorine, which Syria was not obliged to hand over, have recently been used "in a systematic manner in a number of attacks".

Assad's regime and rebels have both accused the other of using chemical agents in the bloody uprising that began in March 2011.

The OPCW team was attacked on May 27 while probing an alleged chlorine attack, but managed to obtain evidence the chemical had been used as a weapon.

France and the US have also alleged that Assad's forces unleashed industrial chemicals on several rebel-held villages in recent months.

Syria did not have to declare its stockpile of chlorine -- a weak toxic agent that can be turned into a weapon -- under the disarmament deal as it is widely used for commercial and domestic purposes.

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