BEIRUT, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Syria has destroyed all of its declared
chemical weapons production and mixing facilities, meeting a major
deadline in an ambitious disarmament programme, the international
chemical weapons watchdog said in a document seen by Reuters.
The
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said in the
document its teams had inspected 21 out of 23 chemical weapons sites
across the country. The other two were too dangerous to inspect but the
chemical equipment had already been moved to other sites which experts
had visited, it said.
"The OPCW is satisfied it
has verified, and seen destroyed, all declared critical
production/mixing/filling equipment from all 23 sites," the document
said.
Under a Russian-American brokered deal,
Damascus agreed to destroy all its chemical weapons after Washington
threatened to use force in response to the killing of hundreds of
people in a sarin attack on the
outskirts of Damascus on Aug. 21.
The
United States and its allies blamed Assad's forces for the attack and
several earlier incidents. The Syrian president has rejected the
charge, blaming rebel brigades.
Under the
disarmament timetable, Syria was due to render unusable all production
and chemical weapons filling facilities by Nov. 1 - a target it has now
met. By mid-2014 it must have destroyed its entire stockpile of
chemical weapons.
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