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Politics : Clinton's Scandals: Is this corruption the worst ever?

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To: Ish who wrote (2768)8/23/1998 4:15:00 PM
From: Les H  Read Replies (3) of 13994
 
UK engineers say no chemical weapons at Sudan plant

LONDON (Reuters) - A British engineer who worked at the factory in Sudan attacked by the United States last week told
Sunday's Observer newspaper that it was not used to make chemical weapons.

''I have intimate knowledge of that factory and it just does not lend itself to the manufacture of chemical weapons,'' Tom
Carnaffin, who worked as technical manager for the plant's owners between 1992 and 1996, told the Observer.

''Unless there have been some radical changes in the last few months, it (the factory) just isn't equipped to cope with the
demands of chemical weapon manufacturing,'' Carnaffin said.

The United States launched missile attacks on Thursday against what it said were ''terrorist'' targets in Afghanistan and Sudan
after U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were bombed.

It said the El Shifa Pharmaceutical Industries factory in north Khartoum was making a chemical needed to manufacture a
deadly nerve gas and was linked to Saudi dissident Osama Bin Laden. The United States has accused Bin Laden of
involvement in the attacks on the U.S. embassies, a charge he has denied through his spokesman.

Carnaffin said the factory's owners, the Baaboud family, were in the process of selling it to a Saudi Arabian.

He said the Baabouds were devastated by the attack. ''People who they knew personally have been killed -- it is very
upsetting,'' Carnaffin said.

The Observer also quoted an independent film maker from Belfast who said he visited the plant last year while making a
promotional video for Sudan's ambassador to London.

''I was allowed to wander about quite freely. This is a perfectly normal chemical factory with the things you would expect --
stainless steel vats and technicians,'' Irwin Armstrong said.
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