Friday, October 11, 2013

Global chemical weapons watchdog wins Nobel Peace Prize.


Global chemical weapons watchdog wins Nobel Peace Prize.(RT).

The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was founded in 1997 to enforce the Chemical Weapons Convention, an international treaty that bans the production, storage and use of chemical weapons.
Its main job since then has been the ongoing monitoring of the process of chemical disarmament by the treaty’s signatories, particularly the US and Russia, the countries that held the largest stockpiles at the time it was signed.

The watchdog recently attracted headlines after a Russia-brokered deal with Syria, which agreed to join the convention and dismantle its chemical weapons arsenal.

The organization’s inspectors are currently on the ground in Syria, supervising the destruction of the country’s estimated 1,000 tons of chemical arms stockpiles.
The task would not be easy in a country engulfed by a two-and-a-half-year war. The current roadmap indicates Syria should be left without chemical weapons capability by mid-2014.

The OPCW team currently working in Syria consists of 27 field experts, with the number expected to rise to roughly 100 by the time the dismantling is in full swing.


The organization said Syrian authorities are ‘quite cooperative’ with them, but the inspectors may find it difficult to access the sites or their interest, which are currently located in rebel-held areas. The sites are presumed to have been emptied from all chemical weapons and related equipment, but the experts needs to ensure that.

Destruction of production equipment and weapons-filling systems for the Syrian chemical weapons is underway and is expected to be completed by November. Destroying the chemicals themselves is a more labor-intensive and risky job. The best approach to the task is still under discussion.
The resolution of a stand-off between Syria and the US – the latter of which threatened to attack the Middle-Eastern country for alleged use of chemical weapons against rebel forces - through Syria’s joining the prohibition treaty is viewed by many as a major achievement for the cause of peace. 
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for his role in brokering the deal, but the application came too late to be considered this year and was pushed to 2014.
Awarding the prominent prize to the OCPW came as a surprise to many. Nobel Prize watchers didn’t mention the organization as a likely laureate. 
Predictions favored several individuals, including Malala Yousafzai, a teenage Pakistani women’s rights campaigner who survived a Taliban attack, Dr. Denis Mukwege, a gynecologist and rape victims’ defender from Congo, Claudia Paz y Paz, the resilient mafia-fighting Guatemalan attorney general, and Sister Mary Tarcisia Lokot, a nun at the forefront of post-war reconciliation in Uganda.

The Committee’s choice was predicted about an hour before the official statement by the Norwegian public broadcaster NRK.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...