
Kiev setting stage for chemical disaster
The accusation came from Maj. Gen. Aleksey Rtishchev, the commander of Russia's Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Protection Troops, who briefed the public about alleged Ukrainian violations of an international treaty prohibiting the use of chemical weapons.
Rtishchev disclosed a document obtained by the Russian military, in which the deputy director of Ukrainian state-owned company Ukrkhimtransammiak informed a regional official appointed by Kiev that in late June Ukrainian troops had illegally accessed a site operated by the firm.
The Ukrkhimtransammiak executive stressed his concern that the location could be damaged due to the military's involvement, potentially causing the release of up to 566 tons of highly toxic liquified ammonia.
The site, an above-ground element of a Soviet-built underground ammonia pipeline operated by Ukrkhimtransammiak, is located roughly 2.5 km north of the village of Novotroitskoye, in the Kiev-controlled portion of Russia's Donetsk People's Republic.
Rtishchev claimed the Ukrainian military had placed communication equipment at the location as part of 'barbaric tactics used by the Kiev regime' which involves 'placing toxic chemicals in the areas where Russian troops operate and their subsequent detonation.'
'The intention is to accuse our nation of intentionally causing a technological disaster and damage its reputation,' the general stated. 'The use of hazardous objects for military purposes violates the international humanitarian law.'
Rtishchev also reiterated Russian accusations against the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). Moscow says the international watchdog ignores Russian reports about Ukrainian violations of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) while taking Kiev's allegations against Russia at face value.
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