A Free Syrian Army fighter talks to his fellow fighters as they hold their weapons near the Justice Palace in Aleppo.
DAMASCUS: Syria will comply with a UN resolution to destroy its chemical arsenal, President Bashar Al Assad said yesterday, as weapons experts prepared to head for Damascus to begin the task.
In the latest violence, an air raid hit a high school in the northern rebel-held city of Raqa killing 16 people, including 10 students, as troops battled rebels on several fronts, a monitoring group said.
A team of around 20 inspectors from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons is due in Damascus on Tuesday, an OPCW official said.
“At this point, we have absolutely no reason to doubt the information provided by the Syrian regime,” the official told journalists at OPCW headquarters in The Hague yesterday.
The regime and the rebels have traded accusations of chemical weapons use during the 30-month war that has killed more than 110,000 people and forced two million to flee the country.
The United States threatened military action after the August 21 attack, in which it said regime forces had deliberately killed hundreds of civilians with rocket-delivered nerve agents.
Syria denied the allegations but agreed to relinquish its chemical arsenal to head off a strike under a US-Russian deal which was enshrined in a landmark UN Security Council resolution.
In his first comments since the resolution was passed on Friday, Assad told Italy’s Rai News 24 television his regime “will comply.”
“Of course we will comply with it, and history proves that we have always honoured all treaties we have signed,” state news agency SANA quoted him as saying.
Assad also said warming relations between the United States and Syria’s ally Iran could benefit Damascus and the region, “so long as the United States is honest.”
But he said that most European countries “are unable” to play a role in the peace conference on Syria, which is being planned for mid-November in Geneva.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon pressed for the conference during his first meeting on Saturday with Syria’s opposition National Coalition chief Ahmad Jarba, who said he was ready to send a delegation to the meeting, a UN spokesman said.
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem, meanwhile, insisted there could be no talk of Assad’s departure — a demand of both Western governments and the Syrian opposition.
“There can be no discussion of the future of President Assad. It is in the constitution,” he said at UN headquarters.
Meanwhile, video footage posted online by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights showed carnage at the school bombed in Raqa, including mangled bodies.
Its authenticity could not immediately be verified.
“There was panic, with children crying as they sought to take shelter,” the Observatory quoted a survivor as saying.
Raqa, the only provincial capital in rebel hands, was captured from government forces in March and is now largely controlled by Al Qaeda loyalists of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
It lies in the Euphrates valley 160 kilometres east of the Aleppo, Syria’s second city.
The air strike came after rebels overnight attacked army positions in Nasseriya Al Qalamun north of Damascus, killing at least 19 soldiers and wounding 60, the Observatory said.
Rebels also seized a swathe of land linking the southern Daraa province to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights after four days of fierce fighting which left 26 regime soldiers and several rebels dead, the monitoring group added.
In the eastern city of Deir Ezzor, Syrian photographer Murhaf Al Modahi, a contributor to AFP known by the pseudonym Abu Shuja, was buried after being killed in shelling on Saturday.
AFP