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Syria will miss June deadline on chemical arsenal: UN

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The destruction of Syria's chemical weapons arsenal will not be completed before a June 30 deadline agreed after Washington threatened air strikes last year, UN chief Ban Ki-moon has said.

An April 27 deadline for Syria to hand over its chemical weapons to international monitors also expired with Damascus holding around eight percent of its declared material.

Under a UN-backed and US-Russia brokered deal agreed last year after the United States threatened air strikes against Syrian government targets, the weapons were to be destroyed by June 30.

But a letter from Ban to the Security Council dated May 23 and obtained by AFP confirmed what had looked increasingly unlikely -- that the June deadline would not be met either.

"It is now evident that some activities related to the elimination of the chemical weapons programme of the Syrian Arab Republic will continue beyond 30 June," he wrote.

Ban said work would continue "for a finite period" after June 30 during which most remaining activities for the elimination of the chemical weapons programme should be completed.

"This will also give sufficient time to put in place appropriate successor arrangements for OPCW to continue any residual in-country verification activities beyond this period," Ban said.

He also expressed concern about alleged ongoing use of chlorine gas and urged the Syrian government and opposition groups to cooperate fully with a fact-finding mission.

The mission was dispatched after France and the United States alleged government forces may have unleashed industrial chemicals on a rebel-held village earlier this month.

Syria did not have to declare its stockpile of chlorine -- a weak toxic agent -- as part of the disarmament deal as it is widely used for commercial and domestic purposes.

The world's chemical watchdog said last week that the last of Syria's chemicals agents were packed but could only be taken out of the country when the security situation permits.

Around 100 metric tonnes of chemicals, or nearly eight percent of Syria's declared stockpile, remain at a single site, said the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

It quoted Syrian authorities as saying they cannot yet be moved from a storage site due to the security situation in the area.

Under the UN-backed deal agreed last year, Syria's government agreed to give up its entire stock of deadly chemicals by April 27, after missing several key deadlines.

Danish and Norwegian ships are to take the chemicals from the port of Latakia to a US ship for destruction at sea, along with sites in Finland, the US and Britain

The deal was reached after a sarin nerve gas attack in a rebel-held Damascus suburb killed around 1,400 people.

The destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal will not be completed before a June 30 deadline agreed after Washington threatened air strikes last year, UN chief Ban Ki-moon has said.

An April 27 deadline for Syria to hand over its chemical weapons to international monitors also expired with Damascus holding around eight percent of its declared material.

Under a UN-backed and US-Russia brokered deal agreed last year after the United States threatened air strikes against Syrian government targets, the weapons were to be destroyed by June 30.

But a letter from Ban to the Security Council dated May 23 and obtained by AFP confirmed what had looked increasingly unlikely — that the June deadline would not be met either.

“It is now evident that some activities related to the elimination of the chemical weapons programme of the Syrian Arab Republic will continue beyond 30 June,” he wrote.

Ban said work would continue “for a finite period” after June 30 during which most remaining activities for the elimination of the chemical weapons programme should be completed.

“This will also give sufficient time to put in place appropriate successor arrangements for OPCW to continue any residual in-country verification activities beyond this period,” Ban said.

He also expressed concern about alleged ongoing use of chlorine gas and urged the Syrian government and opposition groups to cooperate fully with a fact-finding mission.

The mission was dispatched after France and the United States alleged government forces may have unleashed industrial chemicals on a rebel-held village earlier this month.

Syria did not have to declare its stockpile of chlorine — a weak toxic agent — as part of the disarmament deal as it is widely used for commercial and domestic purposes.

The world’s chemical watchdog said last week that the last of Syria’s chemicals agents were packed but could only be taken out of the country when the security situation permits.

Around 100 metric tonnes of chemicals, or nearly eight percent of Syria’s declared stockpile, remain at a single site, said the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

It quoted Syrian authorities as saying they cannot yet be moved from a storage site due to the security situation in the area.

Under the UN-backed deal agreed last year, Syria’s government agreed to give up its entire stock of deadly chemicals by April 27, after missing several key deadlines.

Danish and Norwegian ships are to take the chemicals from the port of Latakia to a US ship for destruction at sea, along with sites in Finland, the US and Britain

The deal was reached after a sarin nerve gas attack in a rebel-held Damascus suburb killed around 1,400 people.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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