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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    Syrian regime used chemical weapons at least 14 times - British PM

    lonelyintexas
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    Syrian regime used chemical weapons at least 14 times - British PM Empty Syrian regime used chemical weapons at least 14 times - British PM

    Post by lonelyintexas Thu 29 Aug 2013, 2:35 pm

    Syrian regime used chemical weapons at least 14 times - British PM

    29/08/2013 | 09:03 PM | World News

    LONDON, Aug 29 (KUNA) -- British Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday the Syrian regime used chemical weapons at least 14 times, noting that the regime also responsible for the wide scale use of such weapons on a suburb of Damascus last week, which resulted in killing hundreds.
    "Assad's regime has used chemical weapons at least 14 times and is probably testing boundaries, but we cannot know the mind of this brutal dictator," Cameron said in the House of Commons emergency session regarding the proper response to Syrian regime's alleged use of chemical weapons.
    The British premier described the use of chemical weapon against Syrian civilians as a crime against humanity, adding the world could not sit and watch such dangerous escalation in the Syrian crisis.
    Cameron also said that he could not accept blaming the Syrian opposition for the attack and the use of chemical weapons, noting that the Syrian regime owns large storage quantities of such arms.
    "There is no 100 percent certainty on who is responsible. We have to make a judgment about who is responsible and whether to intervene or not," Cameron said.
    However, despite acknowledging that there is no clear and direct evidence linking the Syrian regime on the recent massacre, Cameron said that the use of chemical weapons 14 times by the regime was clear enough to test the international community, before making chemical attacks on a wide scale, and probably more in the future if it was not confronted with suitable punishment.
    Cameron added that a military response does not mean a Syrian invasion or attempt to change the ruling regime there, not is it a move supporting the Syrian opposition on the ground, it is a response to war crime and repeated crimes against humanity.
    For his part, Ed Miliband, opposition Labor party leader called on the premier to wait for a UN report and more intelligence before voting on the issue here.
    Miliband said that the report done by the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) is critical, but called for more evidence in the next few days, referring to UN weapon inspectors briefing.
    Miliband added the sequential UN roadmap is the way to go. (end) mrn.mb KUNA 292103 Aug 13NNNN

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