in

Last Chemical Weapons Stocks Shipped Out Of Libya

Libya has shipped the last of its chemical weapons stocks out of the country on a Danish vessel, under a UN-backed plan to cut the arsenal, officials said on Tuesday.

A senior security official said the stocks were shipped to Germany on Saturday from the port of Misrata under the supervision of the United Nations.

The deputy prime minister of Libya’s Government of National Accord, Mussa el-Koni, confirmed the operation, saying: “All of Libya’s chemical arsenal has been shipped out of the country.”

The Danish government had earlier this month offered to send a container vessel, support ship and 200 staff to handle the operation, coördinated by the UN-backed Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

Security situation 

The UN Security Council on July 22 endorsed plans to remove Libya’s chemical weapons from the country and prevent them from falling into the hands of extremists like the ISIS group.

The security official said 23 tanks of chemicals were shipped out under the operation.

The weapons had been stored in the central Jafa area, about 200km south of Sirte, where pro-GNA forces are battling ISIS jihadists, he said.

“We as Libyans did not want these weapons, especially during the current security situation and with the presence of ISIS in the region,” the security official said.

Libya joined the UN convention on eliminating chemical weapons in 2004.

At the time it declared 24.7 tons of mustard gas, 1 390 tons of precursor chemicals and more than 3 500 aerial bombs containing chemical weapons.

It had eliminated all the aerial bombs, 51% of the mustard gas and 40% of the precursor chemicals by 2011, when operations to destroy the arsenal were interrupted by the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi, according to the OPCW.

Written by

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Spanish Superstar Striker, Lucas Perez Signs For Arsenal Football Club

Kenya Bond Window Is Shutting As IMF Sees Risks From Fed To Poll