U.N.
inspectors wrap up work in Damascus
BEIRUT:
U.N. experts have finished their work in Syria and will “expedite”
a report on whether chemical weapons have been used in the country’s
conflict, United Nations spokesman Martin Nesirky said Friday.
29
August, 2013
.
U.N.
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is ready to brief the Security Council
on the investigation into a suspected chemical weapons attack this
weekend if needed, the spokesman said.
Ban
explained the progress made by the inspection team in a meeting with
U.N. ambassadors from Britain, China, France, Russia and the United
States.
“The
team has completed its collection of samples and evidence,” Nesirky
told reporters. “They are now packing up, they will be leaving
Damascus and leaving Syria tomorrow.”
U.N.
disarmament envoy Angela Kane left Damascus Friday and will brief Ban
in New York Saturday, the spokesman added. Interpreters and other
backup staff with the U.N. team also left Friday, he said.
Earlier
Friday the inspectors arrived at a military hospital in a
government-held area of Damascus to visit soldiers affected by an
apparent chemical attack, a Reuters witness said.
The
inspectors have spent the week visiting rebel-controlled areas on the
outskirts of Damascus after reports of a poison gas attack last week
that the opposition blames on President Bashar Assad.
The
Syrian government accuses the rebels of firing chemical munitions at
civilians and soldiers.
Witnesses
said the team was at the Mezzeh Military Airport meeting with
soldiers who government media said were exposed to poison gas in the
Damascus suburb of Jobar Saturday.
Official
media said some soldiers were overcome by fumes after finding
chemical agents in a tunnel that had been used by insurgents.
The
state news agency SANA said soldiers “suffered from cases of
suffocation.” State TV footage did not appear to show evidence of
chemical weapons. It showed five blue and green plastic drums,
normally used to transport oil, lined against a wall in a room and
several rusty mortar bombs and grenades.
On
the ground Friday, fierce fighting raged in a town near Damascus that
the U.N. team visited earlier in the week.
“Violent
fighting is pitting regular armed forces against rebels on the
northern and western fronts of Moadamieh,” the Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said.
“The
army is trying to advance into the town,” it said, adding that an
air raid and a surface-to-surface missile launched by the army had
targeted the area southwest of Damascus.
The
army has for months been trying to take Moadamieh and Daraya –
another Damascus suburb – back from the rebels, without success.
According
to Damascus-based anti-regime activist Ibrahim Shaiban, these two
rebel strongholds have been “intensely” bombed since Thursday.
“Regime
forces have also dispatched men and tanks as backup,” he said.
On
Thursday, eight people – including at least one woman and a child –
died in Moadamieh bombings, and one person was killed in Daraya.
A
top security official in Damascus said the army was “in permanent
confrontation with terrorist groups who are in Moadamieh, and have
been for a long time.”
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