Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons (OPCW). The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons were
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
The
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) will on Monday
welcome its 190th member state — Syria — the country that has brought the relatively
unknown body into the international spotlight.
Seated in
the Dutch city of The Hague, the OPCW is responsible for implementing the
Chemical Weapons Convention. The treaty came into force in 1997 with the aim of
banning countries from making, acquiring, stockpiling or passing on chemical
weapons.
The job of
the OPCW is to verify its members’ status concerning their weapons arsenals and
production plants.
The
organization also monitors the destruction of such arms and provides technical
support to countries in this field.
The body’s
inspectors can also be deployed to investigate whether a country has used
chemical weapons.
There are
currently 27 OPCW experts in Syria tasked with inspecting and dismantling the
country’s chemical arsenal.
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has recommended boosting that number and setting
up a 100-strong joint mission that would oversee the elimination of Syria’s
estimated 1,000 tons of chemical weapons.
The
organization is not part of the United Nations, but it cooperates closely with
it.
The OPCW
says it has verified the destruction of more than 59,000 tons of chemical
warfare agent since 1997, the equivalent of 82 per cent of the world’s declared
stockpile.
Some
experts note that recent budget cuts have left the OPCW ill-equipped to deal
with Syria.
“They don’t
have enough inspectors to follow through on this,” said Paul Walker, a US
activist who is fighting to ban chemical arms.
Mr. Walker
was recently named one of this year’s winners of the Right Livelihood Award,
also known as the Alternative Nobel Prize.
The
organization and its 490 employees are currently led by Turkish diplomat Ahmet
Uzumcu, whose efforts in Syria are supported by all major powers, including the
United States.
A
predecessor of Uzumcu, Jose Bustani of Brazil, did not enjoy US backing when he
tried to get Iraq to join the OPCW ahead of the 2003 Iraqi war.
He was
sacked in April 2002 for alleged mismanagement. But his supporters charged that
the real reason for his dismissal was the fact that he stood in the way of
Washington’s plans for military action against Iraq.
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