International inspectors have confirmed that late Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi had an undeclared stockpile of chemical weapons, the organization that oversees a global ban on such armaments announced Friday.
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said inspectors who visited Libya this week found sulfur mustard and artillery shells “which they determined are chemical munitions,” meaning the shells were not filled with chemicals, but were designed specifically to be loaded with chemical weapons.
“They are not ready to use, because they are not loaded with agents,” OPCW spokesman Michael Luhan said.
He would not divulge the amounts of chemicals in the previously unknown stockpile, except to call it “a fraction” of what Gadhafi disclosed in the past.
Libya’s new rulers told the Hague-based organization about the chemicals last year after toppling Gadhafi from power. The longtime Libyan strongman was killed in October after being captured by rebel fighters.
The newly confirmed chemical armaments are stored at the Ruwagha depot in southeastern Libya together with chemical weapons that Gadhafi had declared to international authorities in 2004 as he tried to shake off his image as an international pariah and rebuild relations with the West.