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WAR REPORT
Syria must hand over all chemical arms: US
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 09, 2014


Jihadists cut water supply in Syria's Aleppo: NGO
Beirut (AFP) May 10, 2014 - Residents of Syria's second city Aleppo have been without water for a week because jihadists have cut supplies into rebel and regime-held areas, a monitoring group said Saturday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front had cut water supplies from a pump distributing to both the rebel-held east and government-held west of Aleppo.

Last month, opposition forces cut the electricity supply to regime-controlled areas of Aleppo and the surrounding countryside.

But Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said the groups were unable to cut off water supplies to regime areas without also affecting rebel-held neighbourhoods, calling the move "a crime."

Once home to some 2.5 million residents and considered Syria's economic powerhouse, Aleppo has been divided between government and opposition control since shortly after fighting there began in mid-2012.

At least one million people have been displaced from the city since then by fighting and relentless regime aerial bombardments of rebel areas.

Opposition forces also regularly shell regime-held parts of the city in the west.

The Observatory said the week of water cuts had forced residents to queue in front of wells to collect water, and the Britain-based group warned that some people were drinking unclean water risking a spread of disease.

The United States urged both Syria and Russia on Friday to ensure that the remaining stockpile of Syrian chemical weapons is handed over to UN inspectors for destruction.

"We still continue to believe that the Assad regime can and must begin to take the necessary steps, including the packaging and destruction of certain materials on the site to demonstrate it is determined to fulfill its obligation," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

The UN's Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which is overseeing the elimination of Syria's toxic arms, has said some 92 percent of the declared stockpile has been removed from the country or destroyed.

But UN Special Coordinator Sigrid Kaag said Thursday that dangerous conditions on the ground have made it impossible to access the remaining chemical weapons containers.

Psaki stressed, however, that the remaining eight percent was in territory held by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

"We need to continue to look for ways to get there regardless, that the regime has the responsibility to remove these weapons," Psaki told reporters.

Washington remains skeptical as to whether Assad has revealed the full extent of his country's stockpile.

"We have never taken the Assad regime at its word... and we continue to approach this process with our eyes wide open," Psaki said.

There are concerns that the regime may have used chlorine gas in an April attack. Chlorine, which has may uses, was not among the chemicals which the OPCW had required Damascus to declare.

The chemical weapons issue was raised during a phone call between US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who struck a deal in September to rid Syria of its chemical weapons.

The two nations reached the agreement, which sets a June 30 deadline for the destruction of the whole stockpile, after a sarin gas attack in the Damascus suburbs in August killed hundreds of people.

"Let's not forget that we've now removed 92 percent of the 100 percent of the declared" arms, Psaki said.

"That is a significant step forward. Does more work need to be done? Yes. But these are chemical weapons that the Assad regime will never again be able to use against their own people."

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