segunda-feira, 26 de agosto de 2013

UN mission investigates today from chemical attack

United Nations inspectors should begin to examine today the area on the outskirts of Damascus, where Syria's opposition denounced last week, a massacre with recourse to chemical weapons that have made more than a thousand dead.

But the "green light" from the regime of Bashar al-Assad, a day after the arrival in Syria of the United Nations High Representative for disarmament, Angela Kane, arrives too late, according to the Western countries. British diplomacy believes that "the evidence may have been destroyed" by the continuous bombing of the Syrian army in the places of the polemical attack.

Damascus tries, without much success, to point the finger to the rebels, who accuse him of using chemical weapons in Linda region.

A strategy, according to the opposition, to divert attention from that which confirmed, will be the worst attack with chemical weapons over the past 25 years.

According to the UN, more than 100,000 people have died since the beginning of the revolt against the Syrian regime, in March 2011.

If You Enjoyed This, Take 5 Seconds To Share It