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| The Hague, 27 July 2005 | Number 36 | ||
On 25 and 26 July 2005, the Director-General of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), Ambassador Rogelio Pfirter, attended the Sixth High-Level Meeting with Regional and Other Governmental Organisations, hosted in New York by United Nations Secretary-General H.E. Mr Kofi Annan. This year's meeting focused on proposals for cooperation between the United Nations and regional organisations contained in the report of the High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change and in the United Nations Secretary General's report "In Larger Freedom". During the meeting, participants examined how the United Nations and these organisations can forge closer partnerships in the pursuit of peace and security in the 21st century.
In his address to the meeting, the Director-General Pfirter stressed the gathering’s importance, as it provides an opportunity for an exchange of views and experience between different organisations in dealing with issues of global significance, including threats to peace and security that are increasingly frequent, ever more deadly, and disruptive. These threats call for a swift and coordinated response.
Director-General Pfirter provided an overview of the OPCW’s efforts to contribute to the common goal of a sustainable, peaceful, and secure world through the effective implementation of a total and unconditional ban on chemical weapons by all States, large and small, possessor and non-possessor alike, and to prevent the proliferation of chemical weapons.
He noted that the OPCW, operating within its mandate, cooperates wherever possible with regional and intergovernmental organisations. In this regard, he recalled the well-established and fruitful cooperation with the United Nations, especially through the Department for Disarmament Affairs, as well as the more recent contributions provided at the request of the Security Council’s Committee on Resolution 1540.
Director-General Pfirter informed the High-Level Meeting of the broad-based cooperation the OPCW pursues, which also includes regular interaction and exchange with the African Union, Europol, IPU, NATO, OSCE, UNEP, UNICRI, UNITAR, UN-OCHA, UNODC among other International Organisations, as well as the successful implementation of the joint action program with the European Union, the conclusion of a Memorandum of Understanding between the Secretariats of the Basel Convention and the OPCW and the ongoing cooperation with the Organisation of American States.
Following the Sixth High-Level Meeting, a joint statement was issued, recognizing the need for an effective, interlocking system that guarantees greater coordination in both policy and action between the UN, regional and other intergovernmental organisations.
The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) is an international, multilateral disarmament treaty which bans the development, production, stockpiling, transfer and use of chemical weapons. The States Parties to the CWC are obligated to declare any chemical weapons-related activities, to secure and destroy any stockpiles of chemical weapons within the stipulated deadlines, as well as to inactivate and eliminate any chemical weapons production capacity within their jurisdiction.
The CWC entered into force in 1997 and mandated the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) to eliminate chemical weapons forever. The OPCW verifies the irreversible destruction of declared chemical weapons stockpiles, as well as the elimination of all declared chemical weapons production facilities. The OPCW Member States, together with OPCW inspectors, monitor the non-diversion of chemicals for activities prohibited under the CWC and verify the consistency of industrial chemical declarations. In addition, OPCW States Parties undertake to provide protection and assistance, if chemical weapons have been used against a State Party, or if such weapons threaten a State Party. The CWC also calls for international cooperation in the peaceful use of chemistry.
The CWC is the single disarmament agreement that in its daily application around the world is used to verify the on-going elimination of an entire category of weapons of mass destruction, chemical weapons. OPCW inspections are conducted in dozens of countries, where both military and industrial sites are subject to verification. The verification procedures and the declaration obligations of the States Parties are applied in an entirely non-discriminatory manner, following protocols negotiated and adopted in intensive and transparent multilateral negotiations. All States Parties enjoy the same rights and bear the same obligations, regardless of their declared possession of chemical weapons.
The global chemical weapons ban is approaching universality: as of 20 August 2005, 170 States will be party to the CWC and have taken the sovereign decision to renounce chemical weapons in perpetuity, while voluntarily complying with a strict verification regime. Together, these countries form the OPCW. Only 24 States have not as yet acceded or ratified the CWC. Every country is urged to accede to, or ratify, the Chemical Weapons Convention so that the development, production, stockpiling, transfer and use of chemical weapons is illegal everywhere. Universality of the CWC is a key priority in establishing a global and permanent ban of chemical weapons.
The CWC's international jurisdiction and deterrent effect is bolstered by the steadily expanding membership of the OPCW, now encompassing over 95% of the global population, as well as 98% of the relevant global chemical industry. The broad coverage of this disarmament treaty, the most complex and comprehensive international agreement of its kind ever to be adopted, grants States party to the CWC an ever more robust assurance that chemical weapons will no longer be developed, produced, stockpiled, used or transferred.
Six States Parties have declared chemical weapons and must destroy over eight million items, including munitions and containers — in total, over seventy-one thousand metric tonnes of extremely toxic chemical agents. By comparison, one drop of a nerve agent, no larger than the head of a pin, can kill an adult within minutes after exposure.
Every Member State must introduce and apply legislation to make the development, production, use, stockpiling or transfer of chemical weapons by any person or group illegal. Severe penalties must be imposed should this crime be committed. Each Member State is obliged to provide other Member States with its fullest cooperation so as to expedite prosecution.
To make sure that the Convention is implemented effectively, Member States are obliged to designate or establish a “National Authority”. This body participates in and coordinates OPCW inspections of relevant industrial or military sites, makes initial and annual declarations, participates in assisting and protecting those Member States which are threatened by, or have indeed suffered, a chemical attack, and fosters the peaceful uses of chemistry. In addition, the National Authority acts as the focal point in the State Party's interaction with other States Parties and the OPCW's Technical Secretariat. The OPCW Technical Secretariat has established a coordinated mechanism to support Member States in their national implementation of the Convention. The focus of this work is to provide advice and assistance to the staff of National Authorities in order to help them enhance their skills and expertise.
100% of the declared chemical weapons production facilities (CWPFs) have been deactivated. All are subjected to a verification regime of unprecedented stringency. Over 75% of the declared CWPFs have been eliminated. Over 25% of the 8.6 million chemical munitions and containers covered by the Convention have been verifiably destroyed. Over 14% of the world's declared stockpiles of approximately 71,000 metric tonnes of chemical agent have been verifiably destroyed. Over 2,000 on-site inspections have been conducted in over 70 States Parties to verify compliance with the CWC.
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