The Hague, 4 February 2002

Number 8
 
Press Release

Monaco and Romania Pay Their Assessed Contribution to the OPCW’s 2002 Budget
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Monaco and Romania have fully paid their annual assessed contribution to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).

This is a welcome development. However, the total sum of the fully-paid contributions, provided by 47 Member States, equals only 20.5% of the total assessed contributions which were due to the Organisation at the beginning of 2002.

Annual contributions to the OPCW by each Member State are calculated primarily on the basis of the United Nations scale of assessment, which is adjusted to match the composition of the OPCW’s membership. In accordance with the Organisation’s financial regulations, Member States are obliged to pay their contributions to the OPCW’s budget by 1 January of each year.

The timely payment by Member States of their annual contributions is essential for the effective functioning of the OPCW, which is tasked with implementing the Chemical Weapons Convention.

OPCW Director-General, Mr José M. Bustani, thanked Monaco, Romania and the other 45 Members for having paid their full contribution and urged the remaining 98 Member States to follow suit as soon as possible.

The OPCW now has 145 Member States. Since the Convention entered into force, the OPCW has carried out more than 1,100 inspections of civilian and military facilities in 49 States Parties.

Forty-seven Member States of the OPCW have so far paid in full their assessed contributions to the Organisation’s budget for the current financial year.

Australia

Mauritius

Belarus

Micronesia (Federated States of)

Bosnia & Herzegovina

Monaco

Brunei Darussalam

Netherlands

Bulgaria

New Zealand

Cameroon

Nigeria

Canada

Norway

China

Pakistan

Cook Islands

Poland

Cyprus

Qatar

Denmark

Romania

Estonia

Saint Lucia

Ethiopia

Saudi Arabia

Finland

Singapore

Holy See

Slovakia

Hungary

Slovenia

India

South Africa

Kenya

Sri Lanka

Kuwait

Swaziland

Latvia

Sweden

Lesotho

Switzerland

Liechtenstein

Ukraine

Luxembourg

United Kingdom of Great Britain and N. Ireland

Malta

 


The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) came into existence on 29 April 1997. Its deed of foundation—the Chemical Weapons Convention—aims to achieve four principal objectives: the elimination of chemical weapons and of the capacity to develop them, the verification of non-proliferation, international assistance and protection in the event of the use or threat of use of chemical weapons, and international cooperation and assistance in the peaceful use of chemistry.

For further information, please contact the Media and Public Affairs Branch at: +31 70 416-3710

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Media and Public Affairs, External Relations Division
©2002 OPCW. All rights reserved.