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China urges greater effort in destroying chemical weapons
Beijing(China)—China on
Thursday reaffirmed its commitment to promote the implementation of the
treaty banning chemical weapons worldwide and called on countries
concerned to destroy all chemical weapons stockpiles by the 2012
deadline.
The calls were made by Xue Hanqin, China’s permanent representative to
the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), while
addressing an annual meeting of the signatory states of the Chemical
Weapons Convention (CWC) in The Hague on Tuesday.
The treaty has played a crucial role in banning and destroying chemical
weapons and in preventing their proliferation since its entry into force
on April 29, 1997, said Xue, who is also Chinese ambassador to the
Netherlands.
And China is always committed to the purpose and principles of the
convention and has honored its obligations, she said.
China attaches great importance to the non-proliferation of chemical
weapons and has adopted an export control regime, which is strictly
enforced, she added.
Noting that the early and complete destruction of chemical weapons is
the fundamental goal set by the CWC, Xue expressed her regret that some
countries are falling behind the destruction schedule prescribed in the
document.
“China believes that the destruction of all chemical weapons stockpiles
in line with the timetable is a matter that has some bearing on the
authority and credibility of the CWC,” she said.
“The possessor states should ... speed up their destruction process and
make sure that all their chemical weapons are destroyed before the
deadline expires,” the Chinese envoy said.
According to the CWC, signatory states should destroy all their chemical
weapons by April 29, 2007. If there is difficulty in meeting the
requirement, the deadline could be extended only once, by five years.
Five of the six countries, including such major possessors of chemical
weapons as the United States and Russia, have asked to extend the
deadline to April 29, 2012. Whether or not to grant them the extension
will be one of the key topics at the annual meeting of the signatories.
Xue called for enhanced international cooperation in the chemical field,
saying it could play a positive role in promoting regular trade among
signatories.
Xue also urged Japan to step up its effort and increase its input in the
disposal of chemical weapons it abandoned in China during the World War
II, as they pose grave threats to both the security of human lives and
the ecological environment.
Despite some positive progress in the disposal of such abandoned weapons
thanks to the cooperation between the two countries, “the substantive
destruction process is yet to start,” she said.
The CWC is an international disarmament treaty which bans the
development, production, stockpiling, transfer and use of chemical
weapons. It currently has 181 signatory countries, representing about 98
percent of the global population.
The OPCW, with its headquarters in The Hague, is mandated to oversee the
implementation of the chemical weapons treaty.
In the past nine years, 22 percent of the world’s declared stockpile of
approximately 71,000 metric tons of chemical agents have been verifiably
destroyed, and 57 of the 65 declared chemical weapons production
facilities have been either destroyed or converted into the use for
peaceful purposes.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |