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US making chemical weapons in Georgia: Russia

Last Updated 04 October 2018, 19:25 IST

Russia on Thursday accused the United States of secretly producing and testing biological weapons including anthrax and plague in ex-Soviet Georgia in violation of international legislation.

The Russian defence ministry's claims came as Western powers accused Moscow of orchestrating a string of global cyber attacks, including an audacious plot to hack the world's chemical weapons watchdog in The Netherlands.

Igor Kirillov, commander of Russia's radiation, chemical and biological protection troops, said the clandestine US laboratory was run out of the Lugar Centre near the Georgian capital Tbilisi.

"It is highly likely that the United States is conducting its activities in contravention of international agreements and continuing to ramp up its biological warfare potential," he told a briefing attended by foreign attaches.

The US-funded centre was established in 2011 but this year a new eight-storey building was erected nearby, he said.

Two floors in the new building are occupied by US ground troops and the laboratory deals with patients "infected by agents of especially dangerous diseases," Kirillov claimed.

Georgian employees have no access to the laboratory, while US military biologists enjoy diplomatic immunity, he said.

Kirillov's statement was based on materials provided by Igor Giorgadze, a former state security minister in Georgia.

"Among the priorities of US research are potential biological warfare agents: tularaemia, anthrax, Mediterranean fever, dengue, Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever and other diseases that are spread by bloodsucking insects," said the senior military official.

He added that the United States is especially interested in atypical forms of plague and is guided by the principle "the more atypical, the better."

Washington said it was not developing biological weapons in the Lugar Center.

"These are also not US facilities," said Pentagon spokesman Eric Pahon.

The centre, he added, worked to protect people from biological threats and promoted public and animal health "through infectious disease detection, epidemiological surveillance, and research."

"These attacks are obvious attempts to divert attention from Russia's bad behaviour on many fronts," Pahon added, referring to Russia's support of Bashar al-Assad in Syria as well as a crisis in Ukraine and elsewhere.

The Georgian health ministry also denied Moscow's claims as "absurd."

"We have repeatedly said that nothing of this kind happens in this centre," a representative said.

Moscow has long accused the United States of running a network of labs close to Russia's borders.

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(Published 04 October 2018, 18:36 IST)

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