During
the national seminar on the implementation of the chemical weapons
non-proliferation regime under the Chemical Weapons Convention,
held in Montevideo, Uruguay on 9 September 2004, the Director-General
of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW),
Mr Rogelio Pfirter, met with the Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Mr H.E. Didier Opertti Badán.
Mr Opertti Badán reiterated his Government’s full
support for the Convention’s goals and renewed its commitment
to ensure the full and effective implementation of the Convention
in Uruguay.
Director-General Pfirter also met the Chairman and members of
the Foreign Relations and Defence Committees of the Uruguayan
Senate and House of Representatives. The legislators expressed
their determination to speed the complete enactment of the national
legislation, required to ensure that any breach of the Convention
can be detected, pursued, prosecuted, and, in the event of conviction,
severely punished.
In conjunction with this meeting, Uruguayan President, H.E.
Mr Jorge Batlle Ibáñez, signed a Presidential Decree,
expanding the competence and mandate of the Uruguayan National
Authority to be able to meet its obligations in full under the
Convention.
The OPCW’s National Authorities act as a national focal
point for effective liaison with the OPCW and other States Parties
to the Convention. In addition, the National Authority bears
the responsibility of ensuring that the trade in certain chemicals
that could be used, either directly or through synthesis with
other compounds, as chemical weapons is restricted to OPCW Member
States.
National Authorities also monitor the import and export of the
chemicals listed in the Convention’s Schedules of Chemicals.
Monitoring and restricting transfers is a fundamental part of
the Convention’s non-proliferation regime, which undertakes
to prevent the re-emergence of these banned weapons.
On behalf of the OPCW, the Director-General acknowledged with appreciation
the clear commitment of the Uruguayan Government in its support for the
full and effective implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention
at the national level.
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