Syria has
submitted a "more specific" list of its chemical weapons to the global
regulator overseeing the destruction of its stockpile after
discrepancies were reported by inspectors on the ground, officials said. Damascus agreed to
give up its chemical arsenal after Washington threatened military action
following the death of hundreds of Syrians in a sarin gas attack on the
outskirts of Damascus during Syria's civil war last August. But
Damascus is several weeks behind schedule in handing over its lethal
toxins. A diplomat said
questions had been raised by member states at the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) about the details of its chemical
arsenal submitted by President Bashar al-Assad's government last year. The
officials said the original list had been based on estimates, not exact
amounts of toxic agents found in storage and production facilities
across Syria. The joint
U.N./OPCW mission in Syria found "discrepancies between what they found,
and what was on the original declaration", one diplomat told Reuters. OPCW
spokesman Michael Luhan confirmed a revised list had been submitted.
"For some of the stockpile, ranges of quantities had been provided. Now
they are being replaced with specific amounts," he said. The
exact amounts came to light after inspectors visited the sites, took
inventory, and packaged the chemicals for transport to the port town of
Latakia, he said. Official could not provide specific details about the
discrepancies. Syria
initially reported to the OPCW having roughly 1,300 metric tons of toxic
chemicals, including precursors for poison gas and nerve agents. Luhan
said no new chemicals were added in the revised list. As
part of a deal reached with the United States and Russia last year, the
Assad government agreed to abandon the weapons of mass destruction and
destroy all chemicals in its possession by June 30. OVER 500 METRIC TONNES OF TOXINS Syria
did not make public the exact list of chemicals, but officials have
said it includes more than 500 metric tons of highly toxic chemical
weapons, such as sulfur mustard and precursors for the poisonous gas
sarin, as well as more than 700 metric tons of bulk industrial
chemicals. They are being
loaded onto Norwegian and Danish ships in the Syrian port town of
Latakia as part of a multi-million-dollar operation involving at least
10 countries. The
chemical weapons will be neutralized at sea on a specially-equipped U.S.
ship, the MV Cape Ray, while the bulk chemicals will be sent to
commercial waste facilities in Finland, Britain and Germany. But
Syria has fallen several weeks behind schedule in handing over the
chemicals, having shipped out nearly two thirds of the stockpile for
destruction abroad. After
missing several deadlines, Syria submitted a revised plan to the OPCW,
saying it would hand everything over by April 27, or within 10 days. An
official at the OPCW, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed a
new list had been submitted, but said it was part of a routine reporting
process. "Sometimes
information is not complete, or not in a format we require. It's not
extraordinary," the official said. "But what they have submitted needs
to be seen to come to any conclusions and I better not speculate about
what's in there."
Syria submits more 'detailed' list of chemical weapons
Reuters
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