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Number Seven Thousand Three Hundred and Twenty Two - 24 June 2023
Iran Daily - Number Seven Thousand Three Hundred and Twenty Two - 24 June 2023 - Page 2

Two Dutch firms on trial for aiding Saddam’s chemical attacks

A court in The Hague says it will deliver a verdict in August after five Iranian nationals sued two Dutch firms for supplying chemical weapon components to Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq during the 1980s.
Iranian victims of chemical weapons, used by the regime of the Western-backed Iraqi dictator during the 1980s war on Iran, say the two firms Melchemie (now known as Otjiaha) and Forafina Beleggingen (formerly known as KBS Holland) supplied Iraq with chemicals between 1982 and 1984 and were aware that their substances were being used to manufacture mustard gas, Press TV reported.
Meanwhile, the firms deny the allegations, claiming the chemicals were intended for agricultural pesticide use, according to the Dutch daily de Volkskrant.
Billionaire Hans Melchers, the former owner of Melchemie, was summoned to appear in The Hague court on June 22.
Melchers is accused of directly participating in the supply of 1,850 tons of thionyl chloride, a raw material for mustard gas, to Iraq during the war.  
He denies the accusations, but his then company was sentenced in 1987 with a fine and a conditional closure for “intentionally” circumventing a ban imposed by the Dutch government to prevent the export of materials that could be used for manufacturing weapons to Iraq.
KBS Holland also faces a lawsuit for supplying Iraq with TDG, another component used in the production of mustard gas.
The five claimants suffered lasting injuries from mustard gas attacks during the war. They endure respiratory issues and disability due to damage to their lungs, eyes, and skin.
“These people’s lives were destroyed,” the victims’ attorney Liesbeth Zegveld said, adding “These Dutch companies share a part of the responsibility for that.”
During the 1980-88 war, the Iraqi army continuously employed chemical weapons against Iranian combatants and civilians, leaving tens of thousands dead on the spot and many more suffering for years to come.

 

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