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Activists seek to hold Syrian regime to account for chemical attacks

By Waleed Abu al-Khair in Cairo

Abdel Hamid Youssef, pictured here, lost 19 family members in the April 4th, 2017, chemical attack on Khan Sheikhun. [Photo courtesy of Bashir al-Bassam]

Abdel Hamid Youssef, pictured here, lost 19 family members in the April 4th, 2017, chemical attack on Khan Sheikhun. [Photo courtesy of Bashir al-Bassam]

Activists have been submitting documentation to the global chemical watchdog to ensure officials complicit in the Syrian regime's use of outlawed chemical weapons are held to account for their actions.

World governments on June 27th voted to boost the powers of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) to enable it to name those behind toxic arms attacks in Syria, AFP reported.

The decision passed 82-24, despite opposition from Russia, Syria and Iran.

"Syrian human rights organisations have submitted more than 350 reports on the use of chemical weapons against civilians by the regime's army over the past years," Syrian lawyer Bashir al-Bassam told Diyaruna.

A patient receives treatment in Khan Sheikhun after an April 4th, 2017, attack in which sarin gas projectiles were fired into the opposition-held town in Idlib province, killing 83 people. [Photo courtesy of Bashir al-Bassam]

A patient receives treatment in Khan Sheikhun after an April 4th, 2017, attack in which sarin gas projectiles were fired into the opposition-held town in Idlib province, killing 83 people. [Photo courtesy of Bashir al-Bassam]

OPCW has investigated only a small number of these reports, which cover 70 attacks, as it is difficult to access the sites of the alleged attacks, he said.

"A large number of Syrian activists inside and outside Syria are closely monitoring this issue in order to see justice served and those responsible for these criminal acts against Syrian civilians held accountable," he added.

Activists who work with relief and medical organisations have tried, to the extent they are able, to provide proof of the regime’s involvement, al-Bassam said.

"They conducted medical examinations of some of the injured and wounded who were transported out of Syria for treatment after inhaling toxic gas," he said.

They also provided photos and videos documenting the moments that led to civilians experiencing breathing difficulties and death after inhaling toxic gas.

Sites of suspected attacks

According to first response personnel and medics, about 40 people were killed in an alleged April 7th chemical attack on opposition-held Douma.

OPCW said June 13th it had found no evidence nerve gas was used in the attack, but said chlorine may have been used, noting that its fact-finding mission found "along with explosive residues, various chlorinated organic chemicals".

"Work by the team to establish the significance of these results is ongoing," the OPCW said.

Also on June 13th, the OPCW said sarin and chlorine were "very likely" used in two separate attacks in the village of Latamneh in northwestern Syria on March 24th and 25th, 2017.

On March 30th, Latamneh suffered a third attack in which sarin also was used, OPCW director Ahmet Uzumcu told AFP last year.

The Khan Sheikhun attack on April 4th, 2017, which killed more than 80 people, was previously believed to have been the regime's first use of sarin since the deadly August 2013 attack in Eastern Ghouta.

The UN confirmed sarin had been used in the 2013 attack, which killed 1,000 people, including more than 400 children, Syrian journalist Mohammed al-Abdullah told Diyaruna.

Sanctions on Syrian regime

"Syrian regime forces have carried out systematic attacks on civilians with prohibited and chemical weapons," said Cairo University criminal law professor and Regional Centre for Strategic Studies researcher Wael al-Sharimi.

This strategy was exercised "to subjugate the areas outside its control", he told Diyaruna, noting that the regime and affiliated media outlets have issued repeated statements denying the use of chemical weapons.

"Proving it is not difficult, but requires time, because traces of some of the substances used, especially mustard and sarin gases, are difficult to hide," he said, adding that the use of chlorine gas is easier to conceal.

According to international law, al-Sharimi said, responsibility also lies with individuals and companies who transported, facilitated or funded these operations.

"This is what prompted the US Treasury Department and the French government to impose sanctions on a number of entities," he said.

These include the Syrian Scientific Studies and Research Centre (SSRC), Katrangi Electronics Trading (EKT) and Top Technologies.

The US on July 25th announced it had sanctioned eight people and five entities that helped form key parts of a procurement network for Syria's chemical weapons programme.

The move, part of a co-ordinated action with France, targets the procurement network for the SSRC, which the US Treasury says is responsible for developing chemical weapons, AFP reported.

"Syria's horrific use of chemical weapons, including attacks against innocent women and children, remains deeply embedded in our minds," said Sigal Mandelker, the US Treasury's under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.

"We are continuing our campaign to stop the Assad regime’s ruthless attacks by targeting the procurement networks that have supported its chemical weapons programme," she said in a statement.

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