ISIS
is using chlorine as a weapon, Australia’s Foreign Minister says
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[June 06, 2015]
By Morag MacKinnon
PERTH (Reuters) - Islamic State militants
have used chlorine as a weapon and are recruiting highly trained
technicians in a serious bid to develop chemical weapons, Australia’s
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop warned.
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In a speech to an international forum of nations that works to
fight the spread of such weapons, Bishop said the rise of militant
groups such as ISIS, also known as Daish, posed “one of the gravest
security threats we face today.”
“Apart from some crude and small scale endeavors, the conventional
wisdom has been that the terrorist intention to acquire and
weaponize chemical agents has been largely aspirational,” Bishop
told a meeting of the Australia Group in Perth. The speech on Friday
was posted online.
“The use of chlorine by Daish, and its recruitment of highly
technically trained professionals, including from the West, have
revealed far more serious efforts in chemical weapons development,”
she said.
“Daish is likely to have amongst its tens of thousands of recruits
the technical expertise necessary to further refine precursor
materials and build chemical weapons,” Bishop said.
The comments follow allegations by Iraqi Kurdish authorities that
they have evidence that ISIS used chlorine gas against their
peshmerga fighters in northern Iraq in January.
The Kurdish allegations that soil and clothing samples taken after
an ISIS car bombing attempt contained levels of chlorine couldn't be
independently confirmed.
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Chlorine is a choking agent whose use as a chemical weapon dates
back to World War One. It is banned under the 1997 Chemical Weapons
Convention, which prohibits all use of toxic agents on the
battlefield.
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has been
investigating allegations of dozens of recent chlorine gas attacks
in Syrian villages, but it is being refused access to the sites by
President Bashar al-Assad's government.
(Reporting by Morag MacKinnon; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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