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Canada has become the latest to lay the blame for a deadly chemical-weapons attack in Syria last week at Syrian President Bashar Assad's doorstep, despite Russian suggestions to the contrary.
"When it comes to this use of chemical weapons, it is clear to Canada that chemical weapons were used and that they were used by the Assad regime," Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Friday.
More than 40 people were killed and 500 injured — including women and children — after poison gas was used in an attack on Douma, a rebel-held enclave near the Syrian capital of Damascus, on April 7.
The Syrian government has denied responsibility and Russia has suggested Israel or Britain was to blame, the latter to justify increased western intervention into the war-ravaged country.
Freeland made the comments on the sidelines of a major international summit in Lima, Peru, which U.S. President Donald Trump skipped last minute to deal with the recent chemical-weapons attack in Syria, which culminated in the launch of U.S., British and French strikes against Syrian targets on Friday night.
Freeland, who spoke before the strikes were announced, said Canada is working with non-governmental organizations and others to collect evidence of war crimes and other atrocities in Syria.
"We have seen as a pattern in the world today is actors who behave in a reprehensible manner, then can be quite clever in trying to muddy the waters and in trying to dodge responsibility," she added.
"Of course, it is important for Canada to be a country that acts based on facts. But it is equally important for us to be aware of the distraction tactics that some of the actors in the world are using today and to not allow those tactics to work."
U.S. Vice-President Mike Pence is attending the Summit of the Americas in Trump's stead, and is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Saturday.
"I think it is completely understandable that the president would feel that, given this crisis situation, he would need to be at home," Freeland said, adding that the Canadian delegation is looking forward to its meeting with Pence.
While Trump announced the "precision strikes" in Syria, Trudeau has ruled out any Canadian participation.
Comments
When people become 'polarized' they lose the ability to see anything with clarity and comprehension.... Ms. Freeland has also become polarized around the trans Canada pipeline - and her reactions toward BC reveal the same judgemental righteousness that disables any capacity to look for solutions that take in the larger picture that involves - the entire planet - not just a single province in our country. I don't know how it might be possible for a news site to promote a full openness to differing points of view - without inadvertently enabling a kind of normalization of rigid, contracted, biased and fear-based attitudes (like those Ms Freeland expresses). To have a platform of power from which to convict Bashar al Assad - and state Russia's contributions without unbiased, on-the-ground evidence reveals prejudice and a sad-to-see fundamentalist immaturity - not wisdom and strength. I really appreciate this website, but I wish there was some way to keep a thread of discriminating wisdom around the balance point between sane, mature responses and rather insane, childish ones.... for those who are reading these pieces....