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'Terrorists' seize chemical weapons

By Associated Press in New York | China Daily | Updated: 2014-07-10 07:27

Iraq said the Islamic State extremist group has taken control of a vast former chemical weapons facility northwest of Baghdad, where 2,500 chemical rockets filled with the deadly nerve agent sarin or their remnants were stored along with other chemical warfare agents.

Iraq's UN Ambassador Mohamed Ali Alhakim said in a letter to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon circulated on Tuesday that "armed terrorist groups" entered the Muthanna site on June 11, detained officers and soldiers from the protection force guarding the facilities and seized their weapons. The following morning the project manager spotted the looting of some equipment through the camera surveillance system before the "terrorists" disabled it, he said.

The Islamic State, which controls parts of Syria, sent its fighters into neighboring Iraq last month and quickly captured a vast stretch of territory straddling the border between the two countries. Last week, its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, declared the establishment of an Islamic state in the land the extremists control.

Alhakim said as a result of the takeover of Muthanna, Iraq is unable "to fulfill its obligations to destroy chemical weapons" because of the deteriorating security situation. He said it would resume its obligations "as soon as the security situation has improved and control of the facility has been regained".

Alhakim singled out the capture of bunkers 13 and 41 in the sprawling complex 56 km northwest of Baghdad.

The last major report by UN inspectors on the status of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction program was released about a year after the experts left in March 2003. It states that Bunker 13 contained 2,500 sarin-filled 122-mm chemical rockets produced and filled before 1991, and about 180 tons of sodium cyanide, "a very toxic chemical and a precursor for the warfare agent tabun".

The UN said the bunker was bombed during the first Gulf War in February 1991, and the rockets were "partially destroyed or damaged".

It said the sarin munitions were "of poor quality" and "would largely be degraded after years of storage under the conditions existing there". It said the tabun-filled containers were all treated with decontamination solution and likely no longer contain any agent, but "the residue of this decontamination would contain cyanides, which would still be a hazard".

(China Daily 07/10/2014 page12)

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