Syria accuses France of 'hiding truth' on suspected deadly chemical attack
Western Leaders Have Accused President Bashar Al-Assad’s Regime Of Carrying Out An April 4 Sarin Gas Attack On The Rebel-held Town Of Khan Sheikhun That Was Reported To Have Killed 88 People, Including 31 Children.
Syria on Thursday accused France of hiding the real identity of those responsible for a deadly suspected chemical attack, a day after Paris claimed that it had proof the Damascus regime was responsible.
Western leaders have accused President Bashar al-Assad’s regime of carrying out an April 4 sarin gas attack on the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhun that was reported to have killed 88 people, including 31 children.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault yesterday laid out what he described as scientific proof the regime was behind the alleged attack, including analysis of samples taken from the scene.
Damascus fired back on Thursday, condemning “the campaign of deceit, shameless lies and fabrications set forth by... Ayrault”.“This is an attempt to hide the truth of this crime and its perpetrators,” the Syrian foreign ministry said in a statement.
“The French government has neither the authority nor the judicial qualification to determine what happened in Khan Sheikhun. ”Syria’s government has repeatedly denied any use of chemical weapons including in Khan Sheikhun.
In an interview with AFP earlier in April Assad said the allegation was “100 percent fabrication” and a pretext for the US decision to launch air strikes against the Syrian airbase from where Washington believes the attack was launched.
For all the Latest World News, Download News Nation Android and iOS Mobile Apps.
More from World
EUFSC President Konstantin Ishkhanov “Thrilled†to Announce Opening of InClassica Festival in Dubai
Maiden Al-Mohed Al-Hindi Exercise Set to Begin Between Indian Navy and Saudi Arabia Navy
Excellent job by India in reducing COVID-19 related deaths by clamping lockdown: Indian-American doc
Pak summons Indian diplomat over expulsion of 2 High Commission officials on espionage charges
Trump postpones G7 summit, wants India, others to join group