"The government has chosen the port of Gioia Tauro as particularly appropriate," Transport Minister Maurizio Lupi told lawmakers at a parliamentary hearing in Rome on the transloading of the chemicals in Italy.
The operation to transfer some 500 tonnes of Syria's deadliest chemicals from a Danish ship to a US vessel is part of a UN-backed plan to destroy the war-torn country's chemical weapons arsenal by June 30.
"There will be no stocking on land," Lupi said.
Ahmet Uzumcu, the head of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), who was also at the hearing, said the operation would take place "in early February" and would last up to 48 hours.
"I wish to thank Italy for its generous contribution," he said.
The local mayor of Gioia Tauro in the impoverished Calabria region in southern Italy, which is one of the biggest container ports in Europe and moves around three million containers a year, slammed the decision.
"They are putting my life at risk. If anything happens, people will come and get me with pitchforks," he said, adding: "We are considered second-class citizens."
Uzumcu meanwhile said a deadline for destroying the deadliest chemicals by March 31 may not be met but said he was confident the entire arsenal would be decommissioned by June 30 in line with the UN plan.
The official voiced particular concern about unconfirmed reports from the Syrian regime of opposition attacks on two chemical facilities in Syria.
He also said that negotiations with different sides for the transit of the chemical convoys to the Syrian port of Latakia for loading were "challenging".
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