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Both
the Advanced Course for Personnel involved in the Implementation
of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) and the Associate Programme
commenced in The Hague at the headquarters of the Organisation
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) on Monday, 28
July 2003.
Both
training programmes are designed to provide specialised training
in the practical implementation of the Convention, which bans
the development, production, stockpiling, use or transfer of
chemical weapons, as well as monitoring the non-proliferation
of chemical weapons and their precursors. In addition, the Convention
foresees international cooperation among the 153 OPCW Member
States to provide assistance and protection, should chemical
weapons be used against a Member State’s population, or
their use be threatened, while promoting the peaceful uses of
chemistry.
The
five-day Advanced Course for Personnel involved in the Implementation
of the CWC focuses on the detailed and complex requirements for
legislation, industry declarations and the inspections resulting
from these declarations. As the OPCW’s Acting Director
General, Mr Brian Hawtin emphasized, “The OPCW can only
function effectively, and the objectives of the Convention can
only be fully met, if the Convention is implemented properly
and comprehensively at the national level. To achieve this crucial
goal, the Organisation relies on you, the people whose direct
and heavy responsibility is to ensure that each of your respective
countries complies fully with its obligations under the CWC.
And, at the same time, in fulfilling its obligations, each country
fully utilises the benefits of membership in the OPCW.”
The
fourth Associate Programme Course, one of the benefits of OPCW
membership, is being held from 28 July to 3 October 2003. The
Course provides qualified scientists and engineers from the developing
world, or from countries whose economies are in transition, the
skills and experience needed to implement the Convention. In
particular, the course curriculum includes in-depth familiarisation
with the Convention’s stipulations, a 3-week segment at
the University of Surrey to acquire an enhanced understanding
of chemical processes and operations, as well as secondments
to industrial facilities, visits to specialised institutions
and individual research projects. The course has doubled in size
since its launch, now supporting 24 participants from 24 Member
States.
The
Associate Programme serves to develop Member States’ capacity
to implement the Convention fully, as well as to assist Member
States in pursuing their own goals in economic and technological
development.
The
ten-week course could not be conducted without the invaluable
support of the Member States. Japan and the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland provided voluntary contributions.
The active involvement of chemical industry is a crucial prerequisite
for success. The Associate Programme is supported by the European
Chemical Industry Council (CEFIC), as well as the chemical industry
associations of Belgium (Fedichem), Finland (CIF), France (UIC),
Germany (VCI), Italy (FEDERCHIMICA), the Netherlands (VNCI),
Spain (FEIQUE), Sweden (KEMI KONTORET), and Switzerland (SSIC).
In addition, more than a dozen European chemical manufacturers
sponsor the programme through on-site training.
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