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Africa North
Libya: 20 security guards suffer mustard gas poisoning
2013-03-25
[Libya Herald] Twenty militiamen have suffered from inhaling poisonous gas, according to the Arabic news website Almanara. The men were guarding a chemical weapons facility set up by the former regime in the south of Libya.

The guards were said to have been exposed to mustard gas while with a mission from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

GNC officials are said to be involved in moves to send the guards to a hospital in Europe that specialises in such cases.

The main stockpile of Qadaffy-era chemical weapons, 13 tonnes in all, consisting of several hundred munitions loaded with sulfur mustard as well as unweaponised sulphur mustard agent and chemical munitions plus artillery shells, is at Rowagha in central Libya, some 700 km south of Tripoli
...a confusing city, one end of which is located in Lebanon and the other end of which is the capital of Libya. Its chief distinction is being mentioned in the Marine Hymn...
.

When Libya joined the OPCW in 2004, three chemical weapons plants as well as 24.7 tonnes of suphur mustard and 3,563 unloaded weapons were disclosed to the organization. However,
the man who has no enemies isn't anybody and has never done anything...
the Rowagha stockpile was kept secret and not disclosed until after the revolution.

Libya was supposed to have started the destruction of these remaining weapons by 29 April 2012. In the event it did not, instead simply handing over detailed plans to do so by the deadline and requesting a delay.

The operation is to be completed by December 2016, but to begin now.

Speaking in Vienna earlier this week the Director-General of the OPCW, Ahmet Uzumcu, said that destruction of the stockpiles would start in April under the supervision of OPCW inspectors now that the chemical weapons destruction facility was repaired.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Any Iraqi markings on the munitions by chance ?

Considering the Soviets were involved in chem-warfare set up and training for both countries, a 'brand name' is pretty much meaningless.
Posted by: Pappy   2013-03-25 10:25  

#2  No, but most of the stuff in Syria is.

AND all of the stuff they tried to use in that terrorist attack in Amman a few years back by Al Aqaeda was Iraqi in origin.
Posted by: Bill Clinton   2013-03-25 09:57  

#1  The main stockpile of Qadaffy-era chemical weapons, 13 tonnes in all, consisting of several hundred munitions loaded with sulfur mustard as well as unweaponised sulphur mustard agent and chemical munitions plus artillery shells,

Any Iraqi markings on the munitions by chance ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-03-25 03:23  

00:00