A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 8, 2015
Wednesday 7 January 2015
Chemical
weapons investigators concluded “with a high degree of confidence” that
chlorine gas was used as a weapon against three Syrian villages last
year, affecting between 350 and 500 people and killing 13, according to a
report obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press.
The third report by a fact-finding mission from the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons didn’t apportion blame but said 32 of
the 37 people interviewed “saw or heard the sound of a helicopter over
the village at the time of the attack with barrel bombs containing toxic
chemicals”.
The investigators said 26 people heard the distinctive “whistling” sound
of the falling barrel bombs containing toxic chemicals and 16 visited
the impact sites and saw the bombs or their remnants. The report
includes a description of 142 videos and 189 pieces of material obtained
by the investigators as well as photos of impact sites and the inner
chlorine cylinder from a barrel bomb.
The mission was established by the OPCW on 29 April to establish the
facts surrounding allegations of the use of chlorine “for hostile
purposes” in Syria. Chlorine gas is readily available and is used in
industry around the world, but can also be used as a weapon.
The UN security council has been intensely involved in the issue of
alleged chemical weapons use in Syria, unanimously adopting a resolution
on 27 September 2013 ordering Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile to be
secured and destroyed.
Chlorine gas is not listed as a chemical weapon, but eight council
members including the United States said in a 30 December letter
accompanying the report that the resolution also states that any use of
chemical weapons threatens international peace and security and must be
condemned.
The 15 council members discussed the fact-finding mission’s report
behind closed doors Tuesday, and diplomats said the US and other Western
nations who signed the letter along with Jordan urged Security Council
action in response to the findings. But Russia, Syria’s closest ally,
insisted that the report on chlorine attacks was an issue for the OPCW,
which polices the Chemical Weapons Convention, the diplomats said,
speaking on condition of anonymity because consultations were private.
Syria’s deputy foreign minister Faysal Mekdad told an OPCW meeting on 1
December that his government has never used chemical weapons or chlorine
during the country’s four-year civil war, which has claimed over
200,000 people and displaced one third of the country’s population. He
said terror groups “have used chlorine gas in several of the regions of
Syria and Iraq”.
But US ambassador Samantha Power tweeted that “only Syrian regime uses
(helicopters)”. She also tweeted that the Syrian “regime must be shown
it is not enough to destroy declared CW (chemical weapons); must stop
dropping chemical-laden explosives on civilians.”