Statement by Deputy Political Coordinator Laura Dix at
the UN Security Council meeting on Syria.
From: Foreign, Commonwealth
& Development Office and Laura Dix, Deputy Political
Coordinator
The United Kingdom would like nothing more than for this Council
not to hold any more meetings on chemical weapons. As this would
mean that chemical weapons were no longer being produced, stored
or used anywhere in the world, and the perpetrators of chemical
weapons' attacks had been held to account.
Sadly, that is not the case. Chemical weapons are not a historic
problem in Syria. They are a present reality.
The Assad regime continues to possess chemical weapons today.
Thousands of munitions and hundreds of tonnes of chemical agent
remain unaccounted for. Analysis of samples collected at two
sites in April 2023 indicates further undeclared processing and
production activity in Syria.
We are gravely concerned by these developments and we join your
call, High Representative, for greater cooperation by Syria with
the OPCW technical secretariat.
The UN-OPCW Joint Investigative Mechanism and the OPCW's
Investigation and Identification Team found that the Assad regime
used chemical weapons, including sarin and chlorine, against its
own people nine times after acceding to the Chemical Weapons
Convention in 2013.
Syria has failed to make a complete and accurate declaration of
its stockpiles, despite the best and repeated efforts of the OPCW
secretariat. Nor has Syria met its obligations under this
Council's resolution 2118. Independent international
investigations have also now attributed a total of four uses of
chemical weapons to Daesh.
President, failure to hold Syria to account would undermine the
international non-proliferation architecture.
The UK will continue to pursue accountability for the use of
chemical weapons by state and non-state actors. We fully support
the work of the OPCW's Syria missions, and the International,
Impartial and Independent Mechanism for Syria, which assists in
the investigation and prosecution of international crimes
committed in Syria.
We applaud OPCW's impartial and patient work. Until Syria fully
declares and destroys its chemical weapons, this Council should
remain focused on this ongoing threat to international peace and
security.