United States, at UN, accuses Russia of blocking ‘accountability’ on Syria chemical weapons

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US ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield.   | Photo Credit: AFP


OPCW ( Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons) investigators have accused Assad’s regime of sarin gas and chlorine attacks in Syria in 2017. 

The new US envoy to the United Nations on Thursday accused Russia of seeking to stymie efforts to hold the government of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad accountable for its use of chemical weapons during its long civil war.

“We all know the Assad regime has repeatedly used chemical weapons. So why hasn’t the Syrian government been held accountable?” the ambassador, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, told a Security Council meeting via videoconference.

“The answer is sadly simple: the Assad regime has tried to avoid accountability by obstructing independent investigations and undermining the role and work” of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), she said.

“And the regime’s allies, in particular Russia, have also sought to block all efforts to pursue accountability,” added the US diplomat, who was participating in her first Security Council meeting since taking over as President Joe Biden’s envoy.

“Russia has defended the Assad regime despite its chemical weapons attacks, it has attacked the professional work of the OPCW, and it has undermined efforts to hold the Assad regime accountable for its use of chemical weapons and numerous other atrocities.”

File photo: An image released by the Local Committee of Arbeen shows the bodies of children after Syrian rebels claim they were killed in a toxic gas attack by pro-government forces in eastern Ghouta. Picture: AFP/Local Committee of Arbee

Moscow’s UN envoy, Vassily Nebenzia, defended Damascus,

According to the United Nations, which has accused Assad’s regime of carrying out chemical attacks against its own citizens in the past, Damascus has for years not replied to a series of 19 questions about its weapons installations, which could have been used to stock or produce chemical weapons.

OPCW investigators have accused Assad’s regime of sarin gas and chlorine attacks in Syria in 2017. 

Syria’s UN envoy Bassam Sabbagh refuted the US accusation, insisting Damascus was in compliance with international law.

“Syria rejects this hostile and politicized argument,” he said.

THE HINDO.COM

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