Libya's chemical weapons destroyed

With help from the US and other countries, Libya's stock of mustard gas has been destroyed, according to reports.

Libya's supply of mustard gas has been destroyed with help from the US and other countries, the New York Times has reported.

The US and Libya discreetly destroyed the arsenal of chemical arms in the past three months, the newspaper reported on Monday.

The arsenal included hundreds of bombs and artillery rounds filled with deadly mustard agent dating back to the regime of Muammar Gaddafi.

"This is the culmination of a major international effort to eliminate weapons of mass destruction from Libya and to ensure that they never fall into the hands of terrorists," Andrew C Weber, assistant secretary of defence for nuclear, chemical and biological defence programs, was quoted as saying.

The destruction of Libya's chemical weapons began in 2004 when Libya joined the Chemical Weapons Convention.

At the time, it declared 24.7 metric tons of mustard gas, 1390 metric tons of precursor chemicals and 3563 aerial bombs containing chemical weapons.

After Gaddafi was toppled by a popular uprising and killed in October 2011, the new Libyan leadership discovered nearly 2 tons of mustard gas that was already loaded into hundreds of bombs and artillery shells.

The weapons were destroyed using a special oven in the desert. The technology came from a Swedish company, and the Libyan contractors were trained in Germany, the Times reported.


2 min read

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Source: AAP



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