UN to probe Syria chemical attacks

UN to probe Syria chemical attacks
Updated 07 August 2015
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UN to probe Syria chemical attacks

UN to probe Syria chemical attacks

THE UNITED NATIONS: The UN Security Council voted unanimously Friday to set up a panel to identify who is behind deadly chlorine gas attacks in Syria, which the West blames on the Damascus regime.

Russia, Syria’s veto-wielding ally, endorsed the measure as did the rest of the 15-member council — a rare display of unity over how to address the conflict.
Under discussion for months, the US-drafted resolution sets up a team of experts tasked with identifying the perpetrators of the chemical weapons attacks and paves the way for possible sanctions to punish them.
The US ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, called the probe panel a “necessary step” toward “eventual accountability.”
The United States, Britain and France have repeatedly accused President Bashar Assad’s forces of carrying out chlorine gas attacks with barrel bombs dropped from helicopters.
The three countries argue that only the Syrian regime has helicopters. But Russia maintains there is no solid proof that Damascus is behind the attacks.
The investigative panel will be given “full access” to all locations in Syria and allowed to interview witnesses and collect materials, according to the resolution passed Friday.
It mandates the panel to “identify to the greatest extent feasible individuals, entities, groups or governments who were perpetrators, organizers, sponsors or otherwise involved in the use of chemicals as weapons” in Syria.
Pressure has been mounting on the Security Council to take action in Syria, where the war, now in its fifth year, has claimed more than 240,000 lives. It tops the UN’s list of humanitarian crises.
Meanwhile, a monitor said on Friday a cousin of Assad has shot dead a senior air force officer in a road rage incident in the Latakia coastal heartland of their minority Alawite community.
Suleiman Assad, a first cousin once removed, killed Col. Hassan Al-Sheikh “because he overtook him at a crossroads” Thursday evening, said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Assad “followed him, swerved the car around, got out and shot him dead,” said Abdel Rahman, whose group has contacts across war-torn Syria.