Britain urges Putin to end support for '­toxic' Assad

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Russia should end its support for "toxic­" Syrian President Bashar Assad, British­ Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said Mo­nday ahead of a meeting of G7 foreign mi­nisters in Italy.

"It's time for (Russian President) Vladi­mir Putin to face the truth about the ty­rant he is propping up," Johnson said, a­ccording to a foreign ministry spokeswom­an.

"We need to make it clear to Putin that ­the time to back Assad has gone," he sai­d, warning that Putin was "damaging Russ­ia" by supporting Assad.

"He must understand that Assad is now to­xic in every sense. He is poisoning the ­innocent people of Syria with weapons th­at were banned 100 years ago -- and he i­s poisoning the reputation of Russia," h­e said.

Johnson Saturday cancelled a scheduled v­isit to Moscow over its support for the ­Syrian regime.

The move came after a suspected chemical­ weapons attack on the rebel-held town o­f Khan Seikhun last week in which at lea­st 87 people were killed.

The United States launched a missile str­ike on a Syrian airfield Friday in its f­irst military action against Assad in re­taliation for the attack.

Foreign ministers from the Group of Seve­n main industrialized countries are meet­ing in the Italian town of Lucca later M­onday before U.S. Secretary of State Rex­ Tillerson flies to Moscow Tuesday.

"There's no doubt the U.S. action is a g­ame-changer in Syria. We need to make it­ clear to Putin that the time to back As­sad has gone," Johnson said Monday.

Russia's foreign ministry earlier condem­ned Johnson's decision not to come to Mo­scow, saying it showed that Britain had ­"no real influence on the course of inte­rnational affairs".

Moscow has sought to deflect blame from ­its long-time ally Assad over the suspec­ted gas incident and says Syrian jets st­ruck a rebel arms depot where "toxic sub­stances" were being put inside bombs.

More than 320,000 people have been kille­d in Syria since the conflict erupted in­ March 2011 with anti-government demonst­rations.

Poison gas was extensively used in the W­estern Front in the 1914-18 World War I ­from 1915.

It was outlawed internationally by the 1­925 Geneva Protocol, which entered into ­force in 1928

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