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April 27, 2017

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Call to nations to ‘banish evil of chemical weapons’

GLOBAL leaders yesterday urged all nations to help “banish forever the evil of chemical weapons,” as the world’s watchdog warned that decades-long progress toward eliminating them was under threat.

UN chief Antonio Guterres led praise at a solemn ceremony in The Hague for the work of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to mark the agency’s 20th anniversary.

So far some 95 percent of the world’s declared stockpiles of such arms have been destroyed by the OPCW.

And its dangerous, painstaking work to implement the April 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention won it the Nobel Peace Prize in 2013.

But amid reports of sarin, mustard and chlorine gas attacks unleashed during the bitter civil war in Syria, Guterres warned that despite “two decades of success ... progress is under threat.”

“In the Middle East regions are breaking the norm against chemical weapons. The recent attack in Syria was a horrific reminder of this threat. There can be no impunity for these crimes,” he stressed in a video-taped message to the ceremony.

“For 20 years we have been allies in this cause. Now let us resolve to consign these diabolic weapons to the pages of history.”

In an unprecedented step in November, the OPCW’s executive council condemned Syria’s use of toxic weapons — its first public condemnation of any of the 192 members of the convention.

Syria joined the OPCW in 2013 after denying for years that it had toxic arms. And while 100 percent of its declared stockpile has been destroyed in an operation involving some 30 countries, there are growing fears that the Syrian regime did not reveal the true extent of its armory.

OPCW director general Ahmet Uzumcu acknowledged yesterday that “our collective journey to banish forever the evil of chemical weapons has reached momentous landmarks.”

But he warned that “in Syria the OPCW has faced its greatest test of commitment as well as resilience.”

“Our work in Syria is not yet finished. It is of grave concern that we continue to see reports of the use of chemical weapons.”

He urged Egypt, Israel, North Korea and South Sudan — the last four countries which have not yet signed the convention — to join up “without delay.”

And with some victims in the audience, he paid tribute to those who have suffered most from such deadly weapons.




 

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