Experts overseeing the destruction of Syria's chemical arsenal hope to begin on-site inspections and the initial disabling of arms "within the next week," the United Nations said today.
The joint mission of the UN and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said it "has made encouraging initial progress" adding that documents handed over by Damascus yesterday "look promising".
"The team hopes to begin on-site inspections and the initial disabling of equipment within the next week, but this depends on the outcome of the technical groups established with the participation of Syrian experts," they said in a statement.
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UN spokesman Martin Nesirky declined to provide further details to journalists, saying: "The technical experts need to study everything they are given very closely."
"There is clearly a good cooperation with the Syrian authorities at the expert level to try to understand the material provided to the advance team from the UN and OPCW," Nesirky added.
The OPCW-UN team of 19 disarmament experts arrived in Damascus on Tuesday.
They are overseeing the implementation of a UN resolution which orders Syria's chemical arsenal destroyed.
Resolution 2118 was passed after gas attacks on the outskirts of Damascus killed hundreds of people on August 21, an atrocity that prompted the United States to threaten military strikes on Syria.
The UN and the OPCW said joint technical groups were working on verification of information provided by Damascus, the safety of inspectors and "practical arrangements for implementing the plan" to eliminate Syria's chemical arsenal by mid-2014.