Africa
Day was established by a resolution of the Organization of African
Unity (OAU) on the day of the OAU's constitution on 25 May 1963
in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Four
decades later, with the adoption and entry into force of the
Constitutive Act, the new African Union was officially launched
in Durban, South Africa in July 2002. This historic Conference
also adopted Decision AHG/Dec. 181 (XXXVIII) on the Implementation
and Universality of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC).
That Decision welcomed the recommendation for an effective
implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention in Africa
and encouraged the call to achieve the universality of the
Chemical Weapons Convention in Africa.
In July 2003, OPCW Director-General, Mr Rogelio Pfirter, attended the
African Union’s Summit in Maputo, Mozambique. Since July 2003,
five African States have joined the OPCW: Sao Tomé and Principe,
Cape Verde, Libya, Chad and Rwanda. The OPCW now includes 41 African
States.
The
OPCW commends the African Union for its unwavering support
for effective implementation of multilateral treaties, including
the CWC, as well as the African regional conventions contributing
to arms control, disarmament, the prevention of terrorism,
international cooperation and economic development, in achieving
peace and security on the African continent.
African
States have played a pivotal role in the successful negotiation,
and subsequently the implementation, of the CWC. Since the
Entry into Force of the CWC on 29 April 1997, African States
have shared the responsibility of the Convention’s equitable
and effective global implementation through their dedicated
participation in the work of the OPCW’s policy-making
organs, including holding the chairmanship of both the Executive
Council and in the Conference of the States Parties to the
CWC.
OPCW Director General Pfirter renewed the OPCW’s call for the Convention’s
universality in Africa: “On this Africa Day, we observe the unwavering
commitment, vision and solidarity applied over more than four decades
that has brought forth the African Union. The OPCW also recognizes the
invaluable contribution Africa has made, and will continue to make, in
ensuring the advancement of our common purpose: to achieve peace and
security by ridding the African continent of this category of weapons
of mass destruction, while promoting the developmental benefits to be
derived from peaceful chemistry. With the African Union’s indispensable
support, we are confident that Africa will achieve universality and will
become a chemical weapons free region.”
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