North Korea shipments to Syria chemical
arms agency intercepted: U.N. report
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[August 22, 2017]
By Michelle Nichols
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Two North Korean
shipments to a Syrian government agency responsible for the country's
chemical weapons program were intercepted in the past six months,
according to a confidential United Nations report on North Korea
sanctions violations.
The report by a panel of independent U.N. experts, which was submitted
to the U.N. Security Council earlier this month and seen by Reuters on
Monday, gave no details on when or where the interdictions occurred or
what the shipments contained.
"The panel is investigating reported prohibited chemical, ballistic
missile and conventional arms cooperation between Syria and the DPRK
(North Korea)," the experts wrote in the 37-page report.
"Two member states interdicted shipments destined for Syria. Another
Member state informed the panel that it had reasons to believe that the
goods were part of a KOMID contract with Syria," according to the
report.
KOMID is the Korea Mining Development Trading Corporation. It was
blacklisted by the Security Council in 2009 and described as Pyongyang's
key arms dealer and exporter of equipment related to ballistic missiles
and conventional weapons. In March 2016 the council also blacklisted two
KOMID representatives in Syria.
"The consignees were Syrian entities designated by the European Union
and the United States as front companies for Syria's Scientific Studies
and Research Centre (SSRC), a Syrian entity identified by the Panel as
cooperating with KOMID in previous prohibited item transfers," the U.N.
experts wrote.
SSRC has overseen the country's chemical weapons program since the
1970s.
The U.N. experts said activities between Syria and North Korea they were
investigating included cooperation on Syrian Scud missile programs and
maintenance and repair of Syrian surface-to-air missiles air defense
systems.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspected the Command of the
Strategic Force of the Korean People's Army (KPA) in an unknown
location in North Korea in this undated photo released by North
Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on August 15, 2017.
KCNA/via REUTERS
The North Korean and Syrian missions to the United Nations did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
The experts said they were also investigating the use of the VX
nerve agent in Malaysia to kill the estranged half-brother of North
Korea's leader Kim Jong Un in February.
North Korea has been under U.N. sanctions since 2006 over its
ballistic missile and nuclear programs and the Security Council has
ratcheted up the measures in response to five nuclear weapons tests
and four long-range missile launches.
Syria agreed to destroy its chemical weapons in 2013 under a deal
brokered by Russia and the United States. However, diplomats and
weapons inspectors suspect Syria may have secretly maintained or
developed a new chemical weapons capability.
During the country's more than six-year long civil war the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has said the
banned nerve agent sarin has been used at least twice, while the use
of chlorine as a weapon has been widespread. The Syrian government
has repeatedly denied using chemical weapons.
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Tom Brown)
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