Germany exported 111 tonnes of chemicals to Syria
between 2002 and 2006 that could be used in the production of sarin gas,
according to a government document published on Wednesday.
But the government rejected
a suggestion from an opposition lawmaker that Germany might thereby have
inadvertently contributed to the Aug. 21 sarin attack in Syria, which the West blames on
President Bashar al-Assad, Reuters reported.
The chemicals - sodium
fluoride, hydrofluoric acid and ammonium hydrogen fluoride - are classified as
"dual use" under European Union law, meaning they can be used for
either civil or military purposes. They require special export permits.
In a written response to a
parliamentary question from Germany's Left Party, the economy ministry said the
chemicals sold between 2002
and 2003, in 2005
and 2006 had a total value of 174,000 euros ($232,300) and
were sold for civilian use.
"Permits were granted after careful consideration of all possible risks,
including of the goods' misuse or transfer into chemical weapons use. In all
cases their planned civil use was considered to be plausible," the
ministry stated according to Reuters.
"The German government has no information to suggest that the delivered
goods were later used for purposes other than the originally declared civilian
purpose," it added.
Chancellor Angela Merkel
told ARD television: "We are of course looking into all allegations on this
but from what we can see so far the export licence was for civil use."
Jan van Aken, foreign
affairs spokesman for the Left party condemned the sale of the chemicals to
Syria - a country which "the whole world knew had a huge chemical weapons
programme".
"We cannot be sure then whether Germany is not also culpable for the
deadly sarin attack in Damascus on Aug. 21",
said van Aken, whose party is staunchly pacifist and opposed to arms exports
and German involvement in overseas military operations.
United Nations investigators
confirmed on Monday that the nerve agent sarin was used in the attack, which
Washington says killed 1,400
people in a
rebel-held area of Damascus.
Last week, British media
reported that Britain also approved the export to Syria of chemicals that can
make sarin.
Merkel's centre-right
government, which has taken a cautious stance on the Syria crisis before a
German general election on Sunday, has come under opposition pressure over a
surge in German arms exports, including to Middle Eastern countries such as
Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
Arms exports are a sensitive
issue in Germany, given the country's Nazi past and the role arms makers like
Krupp played in fuelling numerous 19th and 20th century wars.
Modern chemical warfare
began on the battlefields of World War One, pioneered by the Germans.
Source: Reuters
Zaman Alwasl
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