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Explosives haul missing in Gaza | Explosives haul missing in Gaza |
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A large stockpile of unexploded weapons has disappeared in Gaza, before United Nations experts were able to dispose of it safely, the BBC has learned. | |
The explosives, including aircraft bombs and white phosphorus shells, were fired by the Israeli military during its recent offensive in the Gaza Strip. | The explosives, including aircraft bombs and white phosphorus shells, were fired by the Israeli military during its recent offensive in the Gaza Strip. |
UN officials said they were urgently trying to establish where the arms had gone and have called for their return. | UN officials said they were urgently trying to establish where the arms had gone and have called for their return. |
Israel has accused Hamas of taking the stockpile, which was under Hamas guard. | |
A UN Mines Action Team has been in Gaza since the end of the war, last month, their job to locate unexploded Israeli ordnance and to organise its safe disposal. | |
Two weeks ago, on 2 February, the UN team was given access to a storage site in Gaza City where more than 7,000kg of explosives were being housed. | |
They included three 2,000-pound bombs and eight 500-pound bombs, which had all been dropped from aircraft but failed to explode. | |
There was also a large number of 155mm shells for delivering the incendiary chemical white phosphorus. | |
Safe areas | |
Many of the explosives had been collected by the Hamas authorities in the Gaza Strip. | |
The UN staff had been waiting for the Israeli army to allow them to bring specialist equipment into Gaza so they would be able to destroy the explosives safely. | |
In particular, the team needed explosives or flares to set off a controlled explosion and they needed tools to allow them to extract fuses from some of the bombs. | |
The UN staff were also waiting for permission from the Israeli military to use two safe areas to dispose of the munitions. | |
At a meeting last Thursday with the Israeli army, two areas were identified: one in the north, in a no-go area close to the border with Israel and the other near Khan Younis in the south, in a former Hamas training area. | |
On Sunday, when UN officials returned to the warehouse, which was under a Hamas police guard, they say they found most of the explosives had gone missing. | |
An Israeli army spokesman said the stockpile had been commandeered by Hamas militants. |