Syria’s chemical attack ‘staged’ with help of foreign secret service: Russia says

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attends a meeting with his Dutch counterpart in Moscow on April 13, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 13 April 2018
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Syria’s chemical attack ‘staged’ with help of foreign secret service: Russia says

  • Lavrov: 'Russophobic' and secret service agents have staged the chemical attacks in Douma’

LONDON: Once again Russia is blaming foreign powers conspirators for the chemical attack on Douma near Damascus last saturday.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday said Moscow had “irrefutable” evidence that an alleged chemical weapons attack in Syria was staged with the help of a foreign secret service.
“We have irrefutable evidence that this was another staged event, and that the secret services of a certain state that is now at the forefront of a Russophobic campaign was involved in this staged event,” he said during a press conference.

The US and France say that they have proof chemical attacks on Douma  took place and will consider punitive military action alongside the UK. 

Russia has requested a UN meeting in New York Friday but there are no confirmation the security council will convene before Monday. 

A delegation from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) will start work in Douma near Damascus Saturday. Assad’s regime has pledged to facilitate their arrival to Damascus and it remain to be seen if they will gain access to the site of Douma’s chemical attack that has killed more than 70 civilians and more than 500 affected by chlorine and nerve agent gas. 

 

 


UN chief appoints Finland’s Haavisto as personal envoy for Sudan

Updated 15 sec ago
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UN chief appoints Finland’s Haavisto as personal envoy for Sudan

  • Former Finnish FM has extensive experience in mediation in the Horn of Africa and Middle East
  • Haavisto was Finland’s minister of foreign affairs from 2019-23

NEW YORK: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has appointed Pekka Haavisto, the former Finnish foreign minister, as his personal envoy for Sudan, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said on Tuesday.
Haavisto succeeds Ramtane Lamamra of Algeria and brings more than 40 years of experience in politics and international affairs to the role, having previously held ministerial positions in Finland’s government as well as senior positions with the EU and UN. He is currently a member of the Finnish parliament.
Haavisto was Finland’s minister of foreign affairs from 2019-23. From 2016-19, he was president of the European Institute of Peace. He has also held the ministerial portfolios of development cooperation, state ownership, and the environment. Haavisto was elected to the Finnish parliament in 1987.
The new personal envoy has broad experience in mediation and negotiation processes in the Horn of Africa and the Middle East, and has worked extensively with the UN, said Dujarric.
From 2009-17, he was special representative to the Finnish foreign minister for mediation and crisis management in Africa. Between 2005 and 2007, Haavisto was the EU special representative for Sudan, where he took part in the Darfur peace negotiations. During that period, he also acted as a UN senior adviser to the Darfur peace process.
Haavisto worked for the UN Environment Programme from 1999 to 2005, including assignments in Iraq, the Palestinian territories, Liberia, and Sudan.
Asked why Lamamra had stepped down, Dujarric said that it was a “joint decision” between the Algerian envoy and the secretary-general.