These ships are helping to transport the chemical weapons
away from Syria 
Germany is joining international efforts to destroy Syria's
stockpile of chemical weapons, the foreign and defence ministries have
announced.
Waste from the destroyed weapons would be burned at a
government facility in the town of Muenster, they said.
Waste from the destroyed weapons would be burned at a
government facility in the town of Muenster, they said.
Germany said it was responding to a request for help from
the UN and OPCW, co-ordinators of the destruction plan.
The first consignment of toxic chemicals left Syria on a
Danish ship early this week.
It is travelling to Italy, where it will be loaded onto a US
Navy ship and shipped to international waters for destruction in a specially
created titanium tank on board.
Germany decided, after a request from the UN and the OPCW,
it "is prepared to make a substantial contribution to the elimination of
Syrian chemical weapons," the foreign and defence ministries said in a
joint statement.
"The government is willing and able to destroy in
Germany remnants created in the course of irreversibly neutralising chemical
weapons from Syria and which resemble industrial waste."
The statement said the project would be handled by the
state-owned company GEKA in Muenster "in full compliance with
environmental regulations".
Britain has also offered to help get rid of the waste.
Syria agreed to destroy its chemical weapons in a deal
brokered by the US and Russia last year.
It followed international outrage when rockets filled with
the nerve agent sarin were fired at three towns in the Ghouta agricultural belt
around the Syrian capital, Damascus, on 21 August.
Hundreds of people were killed in the attacks.
Western powers said only Syrian government forces could have
carried out the assault, but President Bashar al-Assad blamed rebel fighters.
How the plan will unfold
1. The Syrian authorities are responsible for packing and
safely transporting the chemical weapons from 12 sites across the country to
the port of Latakia. Russia has supplied large-capacity and armoured lorries,
while the US has sent container drums and GPS locators.
2. Russia will provide security for loading operations at
Latakia, for which the US has supplied loading, transportation and
decontamination equipment. China has sent 10 ambulances and surveillance
cameras, and Finland an emergency response team in case of accidents.
3. Denmark and Norway are providing cargo ships and military
escorts to take the chemicals to an as yet unnamed port in Italy. Russian and
China will also provide naval escorts.
4. In Italy, the "most critical" chemical agents
will be loaded onto the US Maritime Administration cargo ship, MV Cape Ray, to
be destroyed by hydrolysis in international waters. Less-toxic chemicals will
be shipped by Norwegian and Danish vessels for disposal at commercial
facilities.
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