Google – AFP, 28 August 2013
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UN chemical
arms investigators wait to leave a hotel in Damascus
on August 28, 2013 (AFP)
|
DAMASCUS —
UN experts visited the site Wednesday of a second alleged chemical attack near
Syria's capital, and took blood, urine and hair samples from reported victims,
an AFP photographer said.
Rebels who
control the area said they had travelled in a six-vehicle convoy to the
outlying Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta, one of the areas hit in the
suspected August 21 attacks.
They
visited the site, northeast of the capital, under the protection of rebel
fighters, said the Syrian Revolution General Commission activist group.
"We
took blood, urine and hair samples" from people in a field hospital in
Eastern Ghouta, one of the inspectors said.
Asked if
they had done the same with those who died in the incident, the inspector said
that was not necessary.
"The
test (for the presence of chemical agents) can show positive even after
weeks," he said.
The
inspectors resumed their mission on Wednesday, a day after postponing it for
security reasons.
On Monday,
they had braved sniper fire when they initially tried to enter Eastern Ghouta,
with bullets hitting the tyres and front window of the lead vehicle, the United
Nations said.
Later that
day, they managed to enter Moadamiyet al-Sham, southwest of Damascus, to
collect evidence of the other main area allegedly hit by chemical weapons on
August 21.
The 13 UN
inspectors, seven interpreters and backup staff arrived in Syria on August 18
to start an investigation into whether chemical weapons have been used in the
29-month old conflict that has left more than 100,000 dead.
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Wednesday they needed four days to conclude
their probe.
The team's
findings would then be analysed and the result sent to the UN Security Council
for "any action they would deem to take."
UN
spokesman Martin Nesirky said Ban was referring to a total of four working
days, suggesting the inspectors needed at least until Friday to complete their
mission.
Ban's
comments came as the United States and its allies were building their case for
military action against the Syrian regime over the alleged chemical weapons
attacks.
Opponents
of President Bashar al-Assad's regime say more than 1,300 people, including
children, died when his forces unleashed toxic gases on Eastern Ghouta and
Moadamiyet al-Sham.
The regime
strongly denies the claim and has blamed rebels.
One senior
official even said they were put up to it by Britain, France and the United
States to justify Western military intervention in the 29-month civil war.
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