23 Dec 2024
Thursday 19 May 2016 - 15:08
Story Code : 214701

'Saudi Arabia providing banned chemical munitions to Nusra Front'



A senior European official says Saudi Arabia is providing members of the al-Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front with internationally-banned chemical weapons.

Secretary General of the European Department for Security and Information (DESI) Haitham Abu Said theterrorists regularly use the munitions in their attacks against Syrian civilians.

Abu Said said Wednesday that the ammunition are being supplied to the extremists monthly under a plan drawn up in Bulgaria, and sneaked into Syria through militant-held areas on the border with Jordan.

Abu Said further noted that Nusra Front terrorists have on a number of occasions used weapons containing chemical agents against Syrians, most recently in the strategic northwestern province of Aleppo.

He added that international organizations have recorded several such incidents in the past.

The remarks come as the Russian Defense Ministry said that several trucks, carrying improvised chemical weapons, have been transported to Aleppo from neighboring Idlib.



[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="555"] A man receives treatment at a hospital following a Daesh chemical attack in the Sheikh Maqsood neighborhood of Syrias northwestern city of Aleppo on April 7, 2016. ( Russia Today)[/caption]

The arms are said to contain chlorine-based toxins, the ministry said in a statement.

On May 3, Director General of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Ahmet Uzumcu said that the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group might have already used chemical weapons both in Iraq and Syria.

Uzumcu said fact-finding teams from The Hague-based watchdog had discovered evidence that suggest the use of sulfur mustard in attacks in the two crisis-hit Arab countries.

Although they could not attribute this to Daesh... there are strong suspicions that they may have used chemical weapons, Uzumcu said.

On April 7, 23 people were killed and over 100 others injured in a chemical attack by Daesh terrorists against members of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) in the city of Aleppo.

Videos posted online purportedly show yellow gas rising over Sheikh Maqsood neighborhood in Aleppo, some 355 kilometers (220 miles) north of Damascus.



[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="555"] A young man receives treatment at a hospital following a Daesh chemical attack in the Sheikh Maqsood neighborhood of Syrias northwestern city of Aleppo on April 7, 2016. ( Russia Today)[/caption]

The development came only three days after al-Ikhbariyah Syria satellite television network reported that Daesh had fired a barrage of rockets, carrying mustard gas, at a Syrian military airport in the eastern city of Dayr al-Zawr.

According to a report by the Syrian-American Medical Society, Daesh has carried out more than 160 attacks involving poisonous or asphyxiating agents, such as sarin, chlorine, and mustard gas since the beginning of the Syrian conflict in 2011.

At least 1,491 people have been killed in the chemical attacks.

In August 2013, hundreds of people were also killed in a chemical attack in the Ghouta suburb of Damascus. According to reports, the rockets used in the assault were handmade and contained sarin.

By Press TV

https://theiranproject.com/vdce7e8wzjh8zfi.1kbj.html
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