"I have no doubt that gas has been used. We must congratulate journos from Le Monde. The conclusion is clear. There was sarin gas. But can we trace the trace the origins of it? In the second case there's no doubt it was the regime that was responsible," France's foreign minister told France 2 television.
Laurent Fabius
said lab tests in Paris confirmed numerous uses of the nerve agent, adding that
those who resort to chemical weapons must be punished.
But he did not
specify where or when the agent had been deployed; the White House has said
more proof was needed.
Earlier, the
UN said there were "reasonable grounds" to believe chemical weapons
had been used.
In a new
report, the UN commission of inquiry on Syria also urged foreign powers not to
increase the availability of arms in Syria.
UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-Moon described the atrocities listed in the report - which
details evidence of fresh suspected massacres, sieges and violations of
children's rights - as "sickening and staggering", said his
spokesman.
Children have
been taken hostage, forced to watch torture and even participate in beheadings,
says the report.
Others have
been killed while fighting in the two-year uprising against President Bashar
Assad's regime that the UN says has left at least 80,000 people dead.
Sarin-use
referred to UN
Mr Fabius said
samples had been taken from unspecified locations in Syria and tested in
France.
"These tests show the presence of sarin in
various samples," he said in a statement.
The tests came
after journalists for French newspaper Le Monde smuggled blood samples out of
Syria after witnessing what they believed was a chemical attack in April.
Mr Fabius said
the test results had been handed to the UN. "All options are on the
table," he added.
Sarin, an
extremely potent chemical nerve agent, is colourless and odourless. The use of
chemical weapons is banned by most countries.
Both the
Syrian government and the rebels have in the past accused each other of using
the weapons.
The US was
continuing its effort to gather evidence about the likely use of chemical
weapons, the White House said on Tuesday.
The US and the
UK have said there is emerging evidence of Syrian government forces having used
sarin, with Washington saying it had "varying degrees of confidence"
that chemical weapons had been deployed.
President
Barack Obama called in April for a "vigorous investigation", saying
the use of such weapons would be a "game changer" if verified.
'Lies'
Mr Assad's
government says the claims do not have any credibility, denouncing them as
"lies".
A UN team
established to look specifically into the issue of chemical weapons had
previously said it was ready to go to Syria, but wants unconditional access
with the right to inquire into all credible allegations.
Russia and the
US are leading an international push for a peace conference on Syria, possibly
to be held in Geneva in the next few weeks.
Lakhdar
Brahimi, the UN's special envoy for Syria, is holding closed-door talks with US
and Russian diplomats in Geneva later on how to get Syria's warring parties to
the negotiating table.
That will not
be easy, says the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Switzerland: the opposition groups in
Syria still do not agree on who should represent them.
There are also
tensions between the EU and Russia over the EU's plan to lift an arms embargo
on the opposition, and between Russia and the US over Moscow's commitment to
supply air defence systems to the Syrian government.
The UN human
rights investigators, who have documented war crimes committed by both sides in
Syria, say sending weapons to anyone involved in the fighting would be
completely wrong.
Zaman Alwasl - Agencies
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