Italy boosts security ahead of Syria chemical weapons transfer
A control room housing local officials, firefighters, police and navy officers will begin operating on July 1 ahead of the Ark Futura's arrival
The southern Italian port of Gioia Tauro stepped up security measures on Saturday ahead of the final transfer of Syria's chemical weapons arsenal next week.
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), charged with extracting and destroying Syria's chemical weapons stockpile, confirmed to Agence France-Presse the final transfer of banned material from the Danish vessel Ark Futura to a US ship would take place in early July.
The Ark Futura will take chemicals to Gioia Tauro, where they will be transferred to the US ship Cape Ray on July 2 for destruction at sea. Some are also due to be destroyed in the US, Britain and Finland.
Final security measures were discussed in Italy on Saturday, with additional barriers and checkpoints to be installed and maritime surveillance to be increased around the port.
A control room housing local officials, firefighters, police and navy officers will begin operating on July 1 ahead of the Ark Futura's arrival.
A one kilometre (0.6 mile) no-fly zone will be put in place between July 1-3.
"The transfer will take a maximum of 48 hours and may be done within a day," said OPCW spokesman Michael Luhan."
"They have the equipment that they need, that is why we chose Gioia Tauro as it deals with this type of cargo all the time," he added.
Once transferred the chemicals will be transported aboard the Cape Ray into international waters and destroyed in a process the OPCW says will take "up to 60 days".
-
Syria hands last stockpile of chemical weapons, says watchdog
Sigrid Kaag, head of the joint team of experts from the United Nations and Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, speaks about ... Reports -
Blair ‘knew’ of Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal
'One wonders whether Mr. Blair ... is suffering from some sort of prime ministerial false memory syndrome' Middle East -
Militants seize old Iraqi chemical arms factory
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki says ISIS militants would not be able to produce useable chemical weapons News -
‘Systematic’ chemical weapons use in Syria
The global watchdog says Chemical weapons such as chlorine have been used in a ‘systematic manner’ Middle East -
Syria hands over last of declared chemical weapons
Syria has handed over the last of acknowledged stockpile of chemical weapons, said the international team of weapons experts tasked with overseeing ... Middle East