Syria rebels offer open access to UN chemical probe



UNITED NATIONS- Syrian opposition leaders said Friday that UN inspectors would have "unfettered" access to areas under rebel control to investigate the use of chemical weapons.
The Syrian National Coalition said in a statement it wanted the inspectors to go first to the town of Khan al-Assal, where an attack with chemical weapons was reported on March 19.



Syria rebels offer open access to UN chemical probe
The announcement came after the UN team, led by Swedish expert Ake Sellstrom, reached an agreement with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government to enter the country.
The coalition said it had sent a letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to reaffirm "its offer of full cooperation with the investigation team, particularly in assuring their unfettered access into liberated areas.
"As the Free Syrian Army has recently liberated the Khan al-Assal area, we urge the UN team to begin its investigation in this area and hope to welcome their arrival without any further delays," it added.
UN inspectors are expected to go to Syria as early as next week to carry out inspections at three sites where chemical weapons attacks have been reported.
The United Nations says Khan al-Assal, which is near the key city of Aleppo, is one of the three places where the Syrian government has agreed to allow inspections.
It has said the other two sites are being kept confidential for safety reasons.
The Syrian government and the opposition blame each other for the Khan al-Assal attack.
The UN inspectors only have a mission to determine whether chemical weapons have been used in the 28-month-old conflict, not who staged the attack.
The United Nations says it has been given reports on 13 suspected chemical weapons attacks during the war.
The United States and other Western nations believe chemical arms have been used in limited quantities by Assad's forces.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Saturday, August 3rd 2013
AFP
           


New comment:
Twitter

News | Politics | Features | Arts | Entertainment | Society | Sport



At a glance