The United Nations is sending chemical weapons kits to UN troops in the Golan Heights because of growing fears over Syria's deadly non-conventional arsenal, officials said Monday, according to AFP.
UN peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous briefed the UN Security Council on efforts to bolster the safety of the UN force, which monitors a ceasefire zone between Syria and Israel, after five troops were injured in attacks.
"We have taken measures to enhance security," he told reporters after the meeting, according to the AFP report. "For those personnel who are not equipped on a national basis we are sending them some kits to protect them from chemical attack, if that were to happen."
Extra armored cars have also been sent from other missions to the UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF), which has been monitoring a ceasefire between Israel and Syria since 1974.
There are about 1,000 unarmed troops from Austria, Croatia, India, Japan and Philippines in UNDOF. The Indian troops, at least, are known not to have chemical weapon protection, noted AFP.
Five Austrians were wounded, two seriously, when a convoy taking U.S. troops from the Golan Heights to Damascus airport came under attack earlier this month. There have been a number of incidents in the ceasefire zone this year.
"There have been increasing difficulties fulfilling its mandate," Ladsous said. "The multiplication of incidents is really a concern."
The United States said earlier this month that it had intelligence showing Syria was considering using its chemical weapons. U.S. President Barack Obama led international warnings to President Bashar al-Assad over the arsenal.
The United States and its allies, including Israel, have repeatedly expressed concern that Syria's stockpile, believed to be one of the biggest in the world, could be stolen and fall into extremist hands or be transferred to the Hizbullah terror group by a crumbling Syrian regime.
Ladsous also confirmed that the United Nations is drawing up contingency plans to send a possible international force to Syria if the government collapses, but the UN peacekeeping chief gave no details.
"It is contingency planning based on a number of possible scenarios. But the work is going on," he said, according to AFP.
Meanwhile, Syria's UN ambassador Bashar Jaafari said that Damascus is "genuinely worried" that some countries might equip extremist groups with chemical weapons and then claim they were used by the government.
Jaafari also accused the United States of backing "terrorist" groups in Syria in a letter to UN leader Ban Ki-moon and the UN Security Council which was released Monday.
The letter reaffirmed the Assad government's denial that it would use chemical weapons.
"It is defending its people from terrorists backed by well-known states, at the forefront of which is the United States of America," Jaafari said. "We are genuinely worried that certain states that support terrorism and terrorists could provide the armed terrorist groups with chemical weapons, and then claim they had been used by the Syrian Government," he wrote.