Syria chemical attacks: World powers meet to pressure Damascus

Countries will compile a list of individuals implicated in the weapons' use

TOPSHOT - A Syrian boy holds an oxygen mask over the face of an infant at a make-shift hospital following a reported gas attack on the rebel-held besieged town of Douma in the eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus on January 22, 2018. 
At least 21 cases of suffocation, including children, were reported in Syria in a town in eastern Ghouta, a beleaguered rebel enclave east of Damascus, an NGO accusing the regime of carrying out a new chemical attack said. Since the beginning of the war in Syria in 2011, the government of Bashar al-Assad has been repeatedly accused by UN investigators of using chlorine gas or sarin gas in sometimes lethal chemical attacks.
 / AFP PHOTO / HASAN MOHAMED
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World leaders met in Paris on Tuesday to discuss imposing sanctions and criminal charges against perpetrators of chemicals attacks in Syria.

US secretary of state Rex Tillerson and his French counterpart, Jean-Yves Le Drian, co-hosted a meeting of 29 ministers ahead of a new round of peace talks in Vienna later this week and another round in the Russian city of Sochi next week.

The chemical weapons meeting follows allegations on Monday of a fresh chemical attack by the Syrian regime on Douma in the rebel-held region of Eastern Ghouta.

The alleged attack prompted a sharp warning from the United States to Russia to rein in its ally, Syrian president Bashar Al Assad.

For months, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, has been calling for the creation of a new Syria contact group that would bring together regional countries with the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council — Britain, China, France, Russia and the US.

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Mr Le Drian's entourage indicated that his meeting co-hosted with Mr Tillerson on Tuesday was intended to take the first steps towards setting up the new group.

"Those within the Syrian system have found it extremely difficult to establish a path for peace," an aide to Mr Le Drian said.

The meeting is designed to "find pathways towards and the means for a true political transition with the support of major powers, essentially the P5 and countries in the region directly affected", the aide added.

The regime has been repeatedly accused of using chemical weapons, with the UN among those blaming it for an April 2017 sarin gas attack on the opposition-held village of Khan Sheikhoun which left scores dead.

There have been at least 130 separate chemical weapons attacks in Syria since 2012, according to French estimates, with ISIL also accused of using mustard gas in Syria and Iraq.

At Tuesday's meeting, countries will commit to sharing information and compiling a list of individuals implicated in the use of chemical weapons in Syria and beyond.

These could then be hit with sanctions such as asset freezes and entry bans as well as criminal proceedings at the national level.

A month after his election in May, Mr Macron warned that chemical weapons were a "red line" that would prompt a response from France if used again, though he has declined to specify what that response would be.

The French initiative comes after Russia twice used its UN veto to block an extension of an inquiry by international experts into chemical weapons use in Syria.

"Today the situation is blocked at the highest international level," an aide to Mr Le Drian said, adding: "The perpetrators of chemical attacks must know that they can be prosecuted and that we won't let this lie."

Ahead of the meeting, France announced asset freezes against 25 Syrian companies and executives, as well as French, Lebanese and Chinese businesses accused of aiding regime use of chemical weapons.

The brutal seven-year war has grown even more complex in recent days with Turkey launching a new ground operation against Kurdish militia who it considers an offshoot of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

After the repeated collapse of UN-backed peace talks, a fresh round are due to be held in Vienna on January 25-26, followed by talks under a separate Russian peace initiative in Sochi on January 30, backed by Iran and Turkey.