Chemical arms experts due in Douma on Wednesday, says Russia


People are seen walking in Douma on the outskirts of Damascus, on April 16, 2018.
PHOTO: AFP

THE HAGUE (AFP) - Chemical weapons experts are due to arrive in Douma on Wednesday (April 18) to probe an alleged poison gas attack, Russian officials said, as the United States voiced fears that Moscow may already have "tampered with" evidence at the site.

Following weekend missile strikes on Syria by the US, France and Britain, Russia traded accusations with Western nations on Monday, dismissing as "a blatant lie" accusations that Moscow was hindering the investigation in Douma.

The four nations confronted each other in tense emergency talks at the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in The Hague as inspectors prepare for a difficult and dangerous mission.

On Tuesday, Syrian state media said air defence had shot down missiles over the central province of Homs, with the strikes reportedly targeting regime air bases.

It was not known who carried out the attack, with Pentagon spokesman Heather Babb saying: "There are no US or coalition operations in that area."

The weekend missile strikes by the US, Britain and France were in response to an alleged chlorine and sarin gas attack in Douma on April 7 in which 40 people were said to have been killed.

OPCW director general Ahmet Uzumcu said his nine-strong, all-volunteer team had reached Damascus, but so far "the team has not yet deployed to Douma".

Syrian and Russian officials had warned of "pending security issues to be worked out before any deployment could take place", Mr Uzumcu said.

Mr Igor Kirillov, head of Russia's radiological, biological and chemical protection unit, told reporters the roads still had to be de-mined and cleared and would be tested by United Nations security services on Tuesday.

"On Wednesday is when we plan the arrival of the OPCW experts," he added at a press conference in the Russian embassy in The Hague.

The US ambassador to the OPCW claimed, however, that the Russians had already visited the site and "may have tampered with it with the intent of thwarting the efforts of the OPCW fact-finding mission".

The Kremlin dismissed the claims.

"I can guarantee that Russia has not tampered with the site," Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told the BBC.

And the Russian ambassador to the Netherlands, Mr Alexander Shulgin, said it was a "blatant lie" that Moscow was hampering the investigation.

Instead, he said it was the United States, France and Britain who were "standing in the way" of the investigation by ordering air strikes "in the blink of an eye" before the OPCW team had had a chance to do their work.

The missiles that US, French and British warships fired on suspected chemical facilities on Saturday constituted the biggest Western attack against the regime in the seven-year war to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

The targeted sites were largely empty, and were all said to be facilities for chemical weapons storage or production.

British Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron faced anger on Monday from their lawmakers for conducting the air strikes with the United States.

Despite polls showing scant support for the move, Mrs May said it had been her "responsibility as prime minister to make these decisions", while Mr Macron also defended his move as part of his constitutional powers.

France urged OPCW nations to boost the organisation's work so it can completely dismantle Syria's "secret" toxic weapons programme.

And the United States called for a clear condemnation by the OPCW of "the Syrian government for its reign of chemical terror".

The trio of Western powers that carried out the strikes warned they would repeat the operation if Damascus used chemical weapons again.

Regime forces have now entered Douma and declared the entire Eastern Ghouta region around it fully retaken, ending a five-year siege and reclaiming an opposition bastion on the edge of the capital.

Even though the OPCW team was not allowed in, the Syrian authorities organised a tour of the town for the foreign press, including Agence France-Presse.

It included a visit to the main hospital to which the victims of the alleged chemical attack where taken.

Medical student Marwan Jaber said no chemical weapons were used on April 7. "Suffocation cases arrived as a result of the debris, dust, fire and smoke. They were given routine treatment,"he told AFP.

But "strangers entered as we were in a state of chaos and spread a rumour among people there had been a chemical attack, and people became alarmed".

Damascus and Moscow have vehemently denied that any chemical weapons were used in Douma and alleged instead that grim videos showing civilians foaming at the mouth after the attack were staged.

Russian ambassador Shulgin repeated the accusations, telling reporters in The Hague that Douma residents had not been able to produce "a single body".

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