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22/8/2003
Experts Meet To Strengthen Biological Arms Ban
Experts
from 150 States Parties to the first multilateral disarmament treaty
banning biological weapons and representatives of United Nations
agencies have begun a two-week meeting in Geneva to reinforce legal
and security measures buttressing its implementation.
The
Meeting of Experts, which is taking place at UN headquarters in
Geneva, is the first stage of a new process established by the Fifth
Review Conference of the treaty, the Convention on the Prohibition
of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological
(Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their Destruction.
In
the face of serious disagreements on how to proceed after the collapse
of negotiations on a legally-binding protocol to strengthen the
Convention, the conference decided last November that States Parties
would meet annually until the next Review Conference in 2006 to
"discuss, and promote common understanding and effective action
on" specific topics related to better implementation.
Each
of these annual meetings is to be preceded by a meeting of experts,
with the current session preparing the way for a meeting from 10
to 14 November.
The
current session, joined by experts from the UN World Health Organization
(WHO) and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), is addressing
two topics: the adoption of necessary national measures to implement
the prohibitions set forth in the Convention, including the enactment
of penal legislation; and national mechanisms to establish and maintain
the security and oversight of pathogenic micro-organisms and toxins.
The
Biological Weapons Convention, which opened for signature in 1972
and entered into force in 1975, is the first multilateral disarmament
treaty banning an entire category of weapons. It currently has 150
States Parties, with a further16 having signed but not yet ratified.
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