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Syria chemicals to be shipped for UK destruction in bid to dismantle illegal weapons stockpile

 

Gavin Cordon
Friday 20 December 2013 11:49 EST
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Flashback to August 2013: member of UN investigation team taking samples of sands near a part of a missile in the Damascus countryside
Flashback to August 2013: member of UN investigation team taking samples of sands near a part of a missile in the Damascus countryside (AP Photo/United media office of Arbeen)

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Britain is to destroy 150 tonnes of industrial-grade chemicals as part of the international effort to dismantle President Bashar al-Assad's illegal weapons stockpile.

The Foreign Office said the chemical "B precursors" will be shipped to a British port with suitable off-loading equipment before being transferred to a commercial site where they will incinerated.

A spokesman stressed that the chemicals, which are routinely used in the pharmaceutical industry, become toxic only when they are combined with an "A precursor" to make a nerve agent.

"To eliminate this risk, the A and B precursors will be removed from Syria separately," the spokesman said.

"It is important to stress that these are chemicals, not chemical weapons. They do not contain explosives. The chemicals will be sealed in standard industrial containers to international standards and under the supervision of OPCW (Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons) inspectors."

The British contribution is part of an international effort to dispose of Syria's chemical stockpile following the agreement by Assad to give up his weapons in a deal brokered by the United States and Russia.

The Government is providing a Royal Navy warship to help protect the Danish and Norwegian cargo vessels which will ship the entire stockpile out of Syria as they are sailing through international waters.

It is also providing specialist equipment to the United States to assist in the treatment of the most sensitive chemicals before they are finally destroyed.

"The international mission to destroy Syria's chemical weapons programme is essential to ensure that Assad can never again use these horrific weapons to murder his own people," the Foreign Office spokesman said.

PA

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