The director general of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) offered sympathies to and expressed solidarity with the people of Sardasht on the 36th anniversary of a chemical attack by the former Iraqi regime on the Iranian town.
In a message on Wednesday, OPCW Director-General Fernando Arias commemorated victims of the 1987 chemical weapon attack on Sardasht in northwest Iran.
He said the innocent people who fell victim to the heinous fatal gas attack will remain in the worlds memory forever.
The OPCW chief reiterated the call on the international community to honor its commitments to the global norm of prohibition of chemical weapons.
The Spanish diplomat underlined that collective action will help strengthen the Chemical Weapons Convention.
Located in Iran's northwestern province of West Azarbaijan, Sardasht was the third city in the world after Japans Hiroshima and Nagasaki to become a target of Weapons of Mass Destruction.
On June 28 and 29, 1987, Iraqi bombers attacked 4 crowded parts of Sardasht with chemical bombs and engulfed its residents, women and children, young and old, with fatal chemical gases.
The attacks killed 116 citizens and injured over 5,000.
Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian has said the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran will neither forget nor forgive the perpetrators of the Sardasht chemical attack and their accomplices.