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The
Eighth Session of the Conference of the States Parties to the
Chemical Weapons Convention will convene in The Hague from 20
to 24 October 2003.
The
Chemical Weapons Convention entered into force on 29 April 1997.
The Convention's implementing agency, the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), aims to achieve four
principal objectives: the elimination of chemical weapons and
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
in the peaceful use of chemistry.
Delegations
from over 100 of the Organisation’s 157 Member States (including
the three Contracting States Parties Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan
and Cape Verde) will be attending the meeting. In addition, the
Signatory States, Israel and Chad, as well as Libya, a non-Signatory
State, will be attending the Conference as Observer States.
This
annual Conference, which is the OPCW’s principal policy-making
organ, will consider several agenda items, including:
° Requests
for the extension of intermediate deadlines for the destruction
of category 1 chemical weapons;
° An action plan to foster the full and effective implementation by all States
Parties of national implementation measures as foreseen by the Convention;
° The election of 20 new Members to the Executive Council, the 41-Member
State policy-making body that oversees the practical implementation of the Convention,
whose two-year term will begin on 12 May 2004; and
° The Programme of Work and the Budget for 2004.
The
Eighth Session will be convened as of 10.00, Monday, 20 October
2003, in the Netherlands Congress Centre, The Hague.
Accreditation
for media representatives can be undertaken by fax to the Media
and Public Affairs Branch (+31 70 416 3044). For further information,
please see http://www.opcw.org/csp8/ or
contact the Media and Public Affairs Branch: Ms Aabha Dixit,
(+ 31 70 416 3244), Mr Pere Mora Romà, (+ 31 70 416 3838)
or Mr Peter Kaiser, (+ 31 65 327 4684). |