Advertisement
Advertisement
Syrian conflict
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Smoke rises from the damaged Syrian Scientific Research Centre. Photo: AP

Workers at Syria lab destroyed by missiles deny producing chemical weapons

An official at the centre told journalists the facility was for the development of chemical and pharmaceutical industries, including the development of cancer medicines and serum

Plastic gloves and face masks lay scattered in the rubble of a Syrian research lab destroyed by Western strikes, where an official denied the centre was developing chemical weapons.

US, British and French strikes slammed into a series of targets around Damascus that the Western countries said were linked to the Syrian government’s chemical weapons programme.

One multi-storey complex, in the capital’s northern district of Barzeh, had been completely reduced to rubble, correspondents saw during a government-sponsored tour on Saturday.

Its roof had been punched down and several walls appeared on the verge of collapse.

Even hours after the strikes wrapped up, plumes of smoke wafted lazily up from the building and a burning smell still hung in the air.

“The building had three storeys: a basement, ground floor, and second floor,” said Said Said, an engineer who identified himself as head of the centre’s paint and plastics department.

“It had labs and departments that were unfortunately completely destroyed, with all their equipment and furniture. Thank God, no one was here,” he said.

The bombardment, including both cruise missiles and air-to-surface strikes, hit Syria around 4:00am on Saturday, jolting people awake in the capital’s nearby residential neighbourhoods.

Syrian state news agency SANA reported several missiles hit a research centre in Barzeh, “destroying a building that included scientific labs and a training centre”.

Before and after images from the Barzeh Research and Development Centre in Syria. Photo: AP
The site, according to Western powers, was part of the Syrian government’s “chemical weapons infrastructure”.

“We believe that by hitting Barzeh in particular we’ve attacked the heart of the Syrian chemicals weapon programme,” Lieutenant General Kenneth McKenzie said at the Pentagon.

But Said said only non-lethal research and development was under way at the centre.

“As we work in civilian pharmaceutical and chemical research, we did not expect that we would be hit,” he said.

Areas targeted in Syria by the US-led coalition. Photo: AP

Instead, the centre had been producing antidotes to scorpion and snake venom while running tests on chemical products used in making food, medicine and children’s toys, according to Said.

“If there were chemical weapons, we would not be able to stand here. I’ve been here since 5:30 am in full health – I’m not coughing,” he added.

Saturday’s strikes came in retaliation for an alleged chemical attack on a rebel-held town east of Damascus one week ago, which medics say killed dozens of people.

Inspectors from the world’s chemical watchdog were set to enter the town of Douma on Saturday to investigate the claims.

Said said the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons had visited the site in Barzeh in recent years and had declared it free of any toxic weapons.

“The OPCW used to stay in the two upper rooms, and use the labs, and we would cooperate with them completely,” he said.

“The OPCW has proven in two reports that this building and the centre as a whole are empty and do not produce any chemical weapons.”

Additional reporting by Reuters and Associated Press

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: engineer At destroyed damascus lab denies producing toxic weapons
Post