London. Amnesty International on Tuesday renewed its call for a UN investigation into suspected chemical weapons attacks by Sudanese government forces in Darfur, saying it would be “shameful” if they were not probed.
Amnesty said in a September report it had credible evidence of government forces repeatedly using chemical weapons in a mountainous area of Darfur between January and August 2016 that killed between 200 and 250 people, including many children. The UN’s Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said at the time that it needed more information and evidence to draw any conclusion based on Amnesty’s report.
Amnesty timed its fresh call for a full and independent investigation by OPCW to coincide with the start on Tuesday of a four-day meeting of the UN watchdog’s executive council in The Hague.
“Failure by (OPCW) member states to trigger the investigation would be a monumental and shameful abdication of duty,” Michelle Kagari of Amnesty International said in a statement.
Some OPCW member states had expressed concerns over these “cruel” attacks but that was not enough, Kagari said.
“They must ensure concrete steps are taken to determine the full nature and extent of Sudan’s chemical weapons programme, and demand that Sudan fully cooperates with the OPCW,” she.
Amnesty said OPCW members should also request an “on-site challenge inspection” in the Jebel Marra region of Darfur where the alleged attacks took place. Its nearly 100-page report contained gruesome photographs of children suffering from apparent chemical burns, satellite images of destroyed villages and displaced people, interviews with more than 200 survivors and analysis by chemical weapons experts.
President Omar al-Bashir dismissed the Amnesty report as “just empty lies”.(AFP)
Wednesday, 8 March 2017
Amnesty renews call for probe into Darfur attack
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