Germany admits exporting 'dual-use' chemicals to Syria in 2011
Photo: Ria Novosti
Data
released by the economy ministry showed that German firms had, between
1998 and 2011, exported to Syria a total of 360 tonnes of chemicals for
either military or civilian use.
The
ministry insisted that it had no evidence the chemicals, which were
approved as recently as April 2011, were used in weapons.
"After
a comprehensive review of all available information, it can be assumed
that the goods were used for civilian purposes by private industry," it
said in a statement.
The
ministry did not say which companies had exported the chemicals but
confirmed that shipments stopped from May 2011 when sanctions against
chemical exports to Syria were imposed.
It
had acknowledged two weeks ago that export licences were granted
between 2002 and 2006 for shipments totalling more than 100 tonnes of
so-called "dual-use" chemicals. Ministry sources said the chemicals
could be used in the surface treatment of metals, fluorination of
drinking water and the manufacture of toothpaste.
UN
inspectors reported in September that banned chemical weapons had been
used on a large scale in the Syrian civil war and that evidence showed
sarin gas had killed hundreds in an opposition-held area near Damascus
on August 21.
German
Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said on Saturday at the UN General
Assembly that Berlin was ready to give financial and technical support
to the international operation to destroy Syria's chemical weapons. The
announcement followed a resolution passed by the UN Security Council
which ordered the destruction of Assad's banned chemical arms.
Voice of Russia, AFP
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