Syria condemned for gas attacks by air force in 2017

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The governing body of the world’s chemical weapons watchdog Thursday condemned the use of chemical weapons by Syria and called on the government of President Bashar Assad to declare all of its chemical arsenal.

The statement, approved by a majority of the member nations on the executive council of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, came three months after investigators blamed the Syrian air force for a series of March 2017 attacks with sarin and chlorine in Syria.

“The council expressed its deepest sympathies for the victims of chemical weapons use and condemned the use of chemical weapons as reported by the OPCW Investigation and Identification Team,” the organization based in The Hague said.

The Syrian government has consistently rejected allegations that it launched chemical weapons attacks during the country’s civil war.

The decision adopted by the council requested that Syria reveal to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons within 90 days where the weapons used in the 2017 attacks were “developed, produced, stockpiled, and operationally stored for delivery.”

It also asked Syria to declare “all of the chemical weapons it currently possesses,” to identify chemical weapon production facilities and to resolve “all of the outstanding issues regarding its initial declaration of its chemical weapons stockpile and program.”

Syria joined the organization in 2013 after it was blamed for a deadly poison gas attack in a Damascus suburb.

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