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The Hague, 16 July 2004 |
Number
32
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| Press Release |
OPCW Completes 100,000 Inspector-Days |
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On 13 July 2004, the international inspectors that verify the Chemical Weapons Convention for the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) completed 100,000 inspector-days. The Chemical Weapons Convention entered into force on 29 April 1997, banning the development, production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons. Every country that joins the Convention renounces chemical weapons and ensures that they never re-emerge. This week, the OPCW has dispatched 59 inspectors to 13 sites around the world, where they are verifying that chemical weapons are irreversibly destroyed, chemical weapons in storage are not diverted prior to destruction, former chemical weapons production facilities are inactive, as well as verifying the consistency of the industrial declarations submitted by the OPCW’s 164 Member States. Since 1997, the OPCW’s 173 international inspectors have carried out over 1,800 inspections at 748 sites on the territory of 65 States party to the Convention. When on mission, the OPCW inspectors sometimes work under hazardous conditions. 100,000 inspector-days were completed without a single work-related injury. In the past seven years, OPCW inspectors have verified the destruction of 12% of the 71,000 metric tons of chemical agent and over a quarter of the 8 million munitions, containers and other items declared by States Parties. OPCW Director General, Mr Rogelio Pfirter, congratulated the Inspectorate on behalf of the Member States, stating, “The OPCW’s inspectors are often on long missions, travelling thousands of kilometres to remote locations. There, these women and men, stand watch, guaranteeing that we all can enjoy the protection of the chemical weapons ban. We commend their professionalism and devotion to duty in performing the essential task of verification.” Note for Editors All States Parties to the Convention are automatically members of the OPCW. Established in 1997 upon entry into force of the Convention, the OPCW has its headquarters in The Hague, the Netherlands. The OPCW has three organs: its plenary organ, the Conference of the States Parties (the “Conference”); its executive organ, the Executive Council (the “Council”); and the Technical Secretariat (the “Secretariat”), which is headed by a Director-General. States Parties declare to the OPCW the extent of specific activities which could pose a risk to the object and purpose of the Convention. These activities are subject to international verification and monitoring by the Secretariat, primarily through inspections, to ensure non-proliferation. With the aim of promoting transparency and confidence-building, declared information is shared among States Parties within the confines of the strict confidentiality regime provided for in the Convention. In parallel, implementation of the Convention must be carried out in a manner which avoids hampering the economic or technological development of States Parties, and international cooperation in the field of chemical activities for purposes not prohibited under this Convention. States Parties also benefit from the right to request, through the OPCW, assistance and protection against the use or threat of use of chemical weapons. The Convention enjoys wide adherence: as of the most recent ratification on 20 June 2004, the Convention comprises 164 States Parties and 18 Signatory States. Only 12 States have neither signed nor ratified the convention The fundamental obligations of States Parties to the Convention are never under any circumstances to develop, produce, otherwise acquire, stockpile or retain chemical weapons, or transfer, directly or indirectly, chemical weapons to anyone; or to use chemical weapons; or to engage in any military preparations to use chemical weapons; or to assist, encourage or induce, in any way, anyone to engage in any activity prohibited to a State Party under this Convention. Each State Party undertakes to destroy all chemical weapons and all chemical weapons production facilities that it owns or possesses or that are located in any place under its jurisdiction and control, as well as to destroy all chemical weapons that it abandoned on the territory of another State Party. Finally, each State Party undertakes not to use riot control agents as a method of warfare. The OPCW is mandated to conduct international verification activities and work in the field of international cooperation, to deliver assistance and protection against chemical weapons, and to provide a forum for consultation and cooperation among its Member States. The verification regime is set out in great detail in the Convention. The regime focuses on obtaining relevant facts in order to build confidence among States Parties, and to discover any violations. The CWC requires declarations from States Parties relating to any chemical weapons or related facilities that they have or have had since 1946, as well as with respect to facilities relating to the chemicals listed in the three Schedules to the Convention and to unscheduled discrete organic chemicals.1 The CWC specifies the threshold amounts above which declarations are required for particular types of chemicals. These declarations are verified through routine inspections of the declared facilities. The Convention also provides procedures for ascertaining relevant facts in cases of suspected non-compliance (including the use of challenge inspections), and for investigations of cases of the alleged use of chemical weapons. Inspections are carried out by members of the Secretariat’s Inspectorate Division. The inspectors, drawn from all regions and holding the citizenship of a State Party, are experts in their field. As international civil servants, their responsibilities are not national but exclusively international, and they regulate their conduct solely with the interests of the Organisation in view, subject to the authority of the Director General. The results of routine inspections are reported to the Director-General in the form of a final inspection report. If the report contains any uncertainties that cannot be removed through consultation with the inspected State Party, the Convention requires that the Director-General inform the Council of the results of the inspection. In the case of a challenge inspection, the Director-General must always submit the report to the Council and to all States Parties. If the Organisation conducts an investigation of alleged use, the Director-General must submit both the preliminary and final reports of the inspection team to the Council. The Council will then evaluate the information provided in the reports and make recommendations to the Conference on the measures, if any, to be taken. |
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