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CONVENTION
ON THE PROHIBITION OF THE DEVELOPMENT, PRODUCTION, STOCKPILING AND USE
OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS
AND ON THEIR DESTRUCTION
Paris 13
January 1993
Entered
into force: 29 April 1997
PREAMBLE
The State Parties to this Convention,
Determined to act with a view to achieving effective progress towards
general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international
control,including the prohibition and elimination of all types of weapons
of massdestruction,
Desiring to contribute to the realization of the purposes and principles
of the Charter of the United Nations,
Recalling that the General Assembly of the United Nations has repeatedly
condemned all actions contrary to the principles and objectives of the
Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous
or Other Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare, signed at Geneva
on 17June 1925 (the Geneva Protocol of 1925),
Recognizing that this Convention reaffirms principles and objectives of
and obligations assumed under the Geneva Protocol of 1925, and the Convention
on the Prohibition of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological
(Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their Destruction signed at London,
Moscow and Washington, on 10 April 1972,
Bearing in mind the objective contained in Article IX of the Convention
on the Prohibition of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological
(Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their Destruction,
Determined for the sake of all mankind, to exclude completely the possibility
of the use of chemical weapons, through the implementation of the provisions
of this Convention, thereby complementing the obligations assumed under
the Geneva Protocol of 1925,
Recognizing the prohibition, embodied in the pertinent agreements and
relevant principles of international law, of the use of herbicides as
a method of warfare,
Considering that achievements in the field of chemistry should be used
exclusively for the benefit of mankind,
Desiring to promote free trade in chemicals as well as international cooperation
and exchange of scientific and technical information in the field of chemical
activities for purposes not prohibited under this Convention inorder to
enhance the economic and technological development of all States Parties,
Convinced that the complete and effective prohibition of the development,
production, acquisition, stockpiling, retention, transfer and use of chemical
weapons, and their destruction, represent a necessary step towards the
achievement of these common objectives,
Have agreed as follows:
ARTICLE I
GENERAL OBLIGATIONS
1. Each State Party to this Convention undertakes never under any circumstances:
(a) To develop, produce, otherwise acquire, stockpile or retain chemical
weapons, or transfer, directly or indirectly, chemical weapons to anyone;
(b) To use chemical weapons;
(c) To engage in any military preparations to use chemical weapons;
(d) To assist, encourage or induce, in any way, anyone to engage in any
activity prohibited to a State Party under this Convention.
2. Each State Party undertakes to destroy chemical weapons it owns or
possesses, or that are located in any place under its jurisdiction or
control, in accordance with the provisions of this Convention.
3. Each State Party undertakes to destroy all chemical weapons it abandoned
on the territory of another State Party, in accordance with the provisions
of this Convention.
4. Each State Party undertakes to destroy any chemical weapons production
facilities it owns or possesses, or that are located in any place under
its jurisdiction or control, in accordance with the provisions of this
Convention.
5. Each State Party undertakes not to use riot control agents as a method
of warfare.
ARTICLE II
DEFINITIONS AND CRITERIA
For the purposes of this Convention:
1. "Chemical Weapons" means the following, together or separately:
(a) Toxic chemicals and their precursors, except where intended for purposes
not prohibited under this Convention, as long as the types and quantities
are consistent with such purposes;
(b) Munitions and devices, specifically designed to cause death or other
harm through the toxic properties of those toxic chemicals specified in
subparagraph (a), which would be released as a result of the employment
of such munitions and devices;
(c) Any equipment specifically designed for use directly in connection
with the employment of munitions and devices specified in subparagraph
(b).
2. "Toxic Chemical" means:
Any chemical which through its chemical action on life processes can cause
death, temporary incapacitation or permanent harm to humans or animals.
This includes all such chemicals, regardless of their origin or of their
method of production, and regardless of whether they are produced in facilities,
in munitions or elsewhere.
(For the purpose of implementing this Convention, toxic chemicals which
have been identified for the application of verification measures are
listed in Schedules contained in the Annex on Chemicals.)
3. "Precursor" means:
Any chemical reactant which takes part at any stage in the production
by whatever method of a toxic chemical. This includes any key component
of a binary or multicomponent chemical system.
(For the purpose of implementing this Convention, precursors which have
been identified for the application of verification measures are listed
in Schedules contained in the Annex on Chemicals.)
4. "Key Component of Binary or Multicomponent Chemical Systems"
(hereinafter referred to as "key component") means:
The precursor which plays the most important role in determining the toxic
properties of the final product and reacts rapidly with other chemicals
in the binary or multicomponent system.
5. "Old Chemical Weapons" means:
(a) Chemical weapons which were produced before 1925; or
(b) Chemical weapons produced in the period between 1925 and 1946 that
have deteriorated to such extent that they can no longer be used as chemical
weapons.
6. "Abandoned Chemical Weapons" means:
Chemical weapons, including old chemical weapons, abandoned by a State
after 1January 1925 on the territory of another State without the consent
of the latter.
7. "Riot Control Agent" means:
Any chemical not listed in a Schedule, which can produce rapidly in humans
sensory irritation or disabling physical effects which disappear within
a short time following termination of exposure.
8. "Chemical Weapons Production Facility":
(a) Means any equipment, as well as any building housing such equipment,
that was designed, constructed or used at any time since 1 January 1946:
(i) As part of the stage in the production of chemicals ("final technological
stage") where the material flows would contain, when the equipment
is in operation:
(1) Any chemical listed in Schedule 1 in the Annex on Chemicals; or
(2) Any other chemical that has no use, above 1 tonne per year on the
territory of a State Party or in any other place under the jurisdiction
or control of a State Party, for purposes not prohibited under this Convention,
but can be used for chemical weapons purposes; or
(ii) For filling chemical weapons, including, inter alia, the filling
of chemicals listed in Schedule 1 into munitions, devices or bulk storage
containers; the filling of chemicals into containers thatform part of
assembled binary munitions and devices or into chemical submunitions that
form part of assembled unitar munitions and devices, and the loading of
the containers and chemical submunitions into the respective munitions
and devices;
(b) Does not mean:
(i) Any facility having a production capacity for synthesis of chemicals
specified in subparagraph (a) (i) that is less than 1 tonne;
(ii) Any facility in which a chemical specified in subparagraph (a) (i)
is or was produced as an unavoidable by-product of activities for purposes
not prohibited under this Convention, provided that the chemical does
not exceed 3 per cent of the total product and that the facility is subject
to declaration and inspection under the Annex on Implementation and Verification
(hereinafter referred to as "Verification Annex"); or
(iii)The single small-scale facility for production of chemicals listed
in Schedule 1 for purposes not prohibited under this Convention as referred
to in Part VI of the Verification Annex.
9. "Purposes Not Prohibited Under this Convention" means:
(a) Industrial, agricultural, research, medical, pharmaceutical or other
peaceful purposes;
(b) Protective purposes, namely those purposes directly related to protection
against toxic chemicals and to protection against chemical weapons;
(c) Military purposes not connected with the use of chemical weapons and
not dependent on the use of the toxic properties of chemicals as a method
of warfare;
(d) Law enforcement including domestic riot control purposes.
10. "Production Capacity" means:
The annual quantitative potential for manufacturing a specific chemical
based on the technological process actually used or, if the process is
not yet operational, planned to be used at the relevant facility. It shall
be deemed to be equal to the nameplate capacity or, if the nameplate capacity
is not available, to the design capacity. The nameplate capacity is the
product output under conditions optimized for maximum quantity for the
production facility, as demonstrated by one or more test-runs. The design
capacity is the corresponding theoretically calculated product output.
11. "Organization" means the Organization for the Prohibition
of Chemical Weapons established pursuant to Article VIII of this Convention.
12. For the purposes of Article VI:
(a) "Production" of a chemical means its formation through chemical
reaction;
(b) "Processing" of a chemical means a physical process, such
as formulation, extraction and purification, in which a chemical is not
converted into another chemical;
(c) "Consumption" of a chemical means its conversion into another
chemical via a chemical reaction.
ARTICLE III
DECLARATIONS
1. Each State Party shall submit to the Organization, not later than 30
days after this Convention enters into force for it, he following declarations,
in which it shall:
(a) With respect to chemical weapons:
(i) Declare whether it owns or possesses any chemical weapons, or whether
there are any chemical weapons located in any place under its jurisdiction
or control;
(ii) Specify the precise location, aggregate quantity and detailed inventory
of chemical weapons it owns or possesses, or that are located in any place
under its jurisdiction or control, in accordance with Part IV (A), paragraphs
1 to 3, of the Verification Annex, except for those chemical weapons referred
to in sub-subparagraph (iii);
(iii) Report any chemical weapons on its territory that are owned and
possessed by another State and located in any place under the jurisdiction
or control of another State, in accordance with Part IV (A), paragraph
4, of the Verification Annex;
(iv)Declare whether it has transferred or received, directly or indirectly,
any chemical weapons since 1 January 1946 and specify the transfer or
receipt of such weapons, in accordance with Part IV (A), paragraph 5,
of the Verification Annex;
(v) Provide its general plan for destruction of chemical weapons that
it owns or possesses, or that are located in any place under its jurisdiction
or control, in accordance with Part IV (A), paragraph 6, of the Verification
Annex;
(b) With respect to old chemical weapons and abandoned chemical weapons:
(i) Declare whether it has on its territory old chemical weapons and provide
all available information in accordance with Part IV (B), paragraph 3,
of the Verification Annex;
(ii)Declare whether there are abandoned chemical weapons on its territory
and provide all available information in accordance with Part IV (B),
paragraph 8, of the Verification Annex;
(iii)Declare whether it has abandoned chemical weapons on the territory
of other States and provide all available information in accordance with
Part IV (B), paragraph 10, of the Verification Annex;
(c) With respect to chemical weapons production facilities:
(i) Declare whether it has or has had any chemical weapons production
facility under its ownership or possession, or that is or has been located
in any place under its jurisdiction or control at any time since 1 January
1946;
(ii)Specify any chemical weapons production facility it has or has had
under its ownership or possession or that is or has been located in any
place under its jurisdiction or control at any time since 1 January 1946,
in accordance with Part V, paragraph 1, of the Verification Annex, except
for those facilities referred to in sub-subparagraph (iii);
(iii)Report any chemical weapons production facility on its territory
that another State has or has had under its ownership and possession and
that is or has been located in any place under the jurisdiction or control
of another State at any time since 1 January 1946, in accordance with
Part V, paragraph 2, of the Verification Annex;
(iv)Declare whether it has transferred or received, directly or indirectly,
any equipment for the production of chemical weapons since 1 January 1946
and specify the transfer or receipt of such equipment, in accordance with
Part V, paragraphs 3 to 5, of the Verification Annex;
(v)Provide its general plan for destruction of any chemical weapons production
facility it owns or possesses, or that is located in any place under its
jurisdiction or control, in accordance with Part V, paragraph 6, of the
Verification Annex;
(vi)Specify actions to be taken for closure of any chemical weapons production
facility it owns or possesses, or that is located in any place under its
jurisdiction or control, in accordance with Part V, paragraph 1 (i), of
the Verification Annex;
(vii)Provide its general plan for any temporary conversion of any chemical
weapons production facility it owns or possesses, or that is located in
any place under its jurisdiction or control, into chemical weapons destruction
facility, in accordance with Part V, paragraph 7, of the Verification
Annex;
(d) With respect to other facilities: Specify the precise location, nature
and general scope of activities of any facility or establishment under
its ownership or possession, or located in any place under its jurisdiction
or control, and that has been designed, constructed or used since 1 January
1946 primarily for development of chemical weapons. Such declaration shall
include, inter alia, laboratories and test and evaluation sites;
(e) With respect to riot control agents: Specify the chemical name, structural
formula and Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) registry number, if assigned,
of each chemical it holds for riot control purposes. Thisdeclaration shall
be updated not later than 30 days after any change becomes effective.
2. The provisions of this Article and the relevant provisions of Part
IV of the Verification Annex shall not, at the discretion of a State Party,
apply to chemical weapons buried on its territory before 1 January 1977
and which remain buried, or which had been dumped at sea before 1 January
1985.
ARTICLE IV
CHEMICAL WEAPONS
1. The provisions of this Article and the detailed procedures for its
implementation shall apply to all chemical weapons owned or possessed
by a State Party, or that are located in any place under its jurisdiction
orcontrol, except old chemical weapons and abandoned chemical weapons
to which Part IV (B) of the Verification Annex applies.
2. Detailed procedures for the implementation of this Article are set
forth in the Verification Annex.
3. All locations at which chemical weapons specified in paragraph 1 are
stored or destroyed shall be subject to systematic verification through
on-site inspection and monitoring with on-site instruments, in accordance
with Part IV(A) of the Verification Annex.
4. Each State Party shall, immediately after the declaration under Article
III, paragraph 1 (a), has been submitted, provide access to chemical weapons
specified in paragraph 1 for the purpose of systematic verification of
thedeclaration through on-site inspection. Thereafter, each State Party
shall not remove any of these chemical weapons, except to a chemical weapons
destruction facility. It shall provide access to such chemical weapons,
for the purpose of systematic on-site verification.
5. Each State Party shall provide access to any chemical weapons destruction
facilities and their storage areas, that it owns or possesses, or that
are located in any place under its jurisdiction or control, for the purpose
of systematic verification through on-site inspection and monitoring with
on-site instruments.
6. Each State Party shall destroy all chemical weapons specified in paragraph
1 pursuant to the Verification Annex and in accordance with the agreed
rate and sequence of destruction (hereinafter referred to as "order
of destruction"). Such destruction shall begin not later than two
years after this Convention enters into force for it and shall finish
not later than 10 years after entry into force of this Convention. A State
Party is not precluded from destroying such chemical weapons at a faster
rate.
7. Each State Party shall:
(a) Submit detailed plans for the destruction of chemical weapons specified
in paragraph 1 not later than 60 days before each annual destruction period
begins, in accordance with Part IV (A), paragraph 29, of the Verification
Annex; the detailed plans shall encompass all stocks to be destroyed during
the next annual destruction period;
(b) Submit declarations annually regarding the implementation of its plans
for destruction of chemical weapons specified in paragraph 1, not later
than 60 days after the end of each annual destruction period; and
(c) Certify, not later than 30 days after the destruction process has
been completed, that all chemical weapons specified in paragraph 1 have
been destroyed.
8. If a State ratifies or accedes to this Convention after the 10-year
period for destruction set forth in paragraph 6, it shall destroy chemical
weapons specified in paragraph 1 as soon as possible. The order of destruction
and procedures for stringent verification for such a State Party shall
be determined by the Executive Council.
9. Any chemical weapons discovered by a State Party after the initial
declaration of chemical weapons shall be reported, secured and destroyed
in accordance with Part IV (A) of the Verification Annex.
10. Each State Party, during transportation, sampling, storage and destruction
of chemical weapons, shall assign the highest priority to ensuring the
safety of people and to protecting the environment. Each State Party shall
transport, sample, store and destroy chemical weapons in accordance with
its national standards for safety and emissions.
11. Any State Party which has on its territory chemical weapons that are
owned or possessed by another State, or that are located in any place
under the jurisdiction or control of another State, shall make the fullest
efforts to ensure that these chemical weapons are removed from its territory
not later than one year after this Convention enters into force for it.
If they are not removed within one year, the State Party may request the
Organization and other States Parties to provide assistance in the destruction
of these chemical weapons.
12. Each State Party undertakes to cooperate with other States Parties
that request information or assistance on a bilateral basis or through
the Technical Secretariat regarding methods and technologies for the safe
and efficient destruction of chemical weapons.
13. In carrying out verification activities pursuant to this Article and
Part IV (A) of the Verification Annex, the Organization shall consider
measures to avoid unnecessary duplication of bilateral or multilateral
agreements on verification of chemical weapons storage and their destruction
among States Parties.
To this end, the Executive Council shall decide to limit verification
to measures complementary to those undertaken pursuant to such a bilateral
or multilateral agreement, if it considers that:
(a) Verification provisions of such an agreement are consistent with the
verification provisions of this Article and Part IV (A) of the Verification
Annex;
(b) Implementation of such an agreement provides for sufficient assurance
of compliance with the relevant provisions of this Convention; and
(c) Parties to the bilateral or multilateral agreement keep the Organization
fully informed about their verification activities.
14. If the Executive Council takes a decision pursuant to paragraph 13,
the Organization shall have the right to monitor the implementation of
the bilateral or multilateral agreement.
15. Nothing in paragraphs 13 and 14 shall affect the obligation of a State
Party to provide declarations pursuant to Article III, this Article and
Part IV (A) of the Verification Annex.
16. Each State Party shall meet the costs of destruction of chemical weapons
it is obliged to destroy. It shall also meet the costs of verification
of storage and destruction of these chemical weapons unless the Executive
Councildecides otherwise. If the Executive Council decides to limit verification
measures of the Organization pursuant to paragraph 13, the costs of complementary
verification and monitoring by the Organization shall be paid in accordance
with the United Nations scale of assessment, as specified in Article VIII,
paragraph 7.
17. The provisions of this Article and the relevant provisions of Part
IV of the Verification Annex shall not, at the discretion of a State Party,
apply to chemical weapons buried on its territory before 1 January 1977
and which remain buried, or which had been dumped at sea before 1 January
1985.
ARTICLE V
CHEMICAL WEAPONS PRODUCTION FACILITIES
1. The provisions of this Article and the detailed procedures for its
implementation shall apply to any and all chemical weapons production
facilities owned or possessed by a State Party, or that are located in
any place under its jurisdiction or control.
2. Detailed procedures for the implementation of this Article are set
forth in the Verification Annex.
3. All chemical weapons production facilities specified in paragraph 1
shall be subject to systematic verification through on-site inspection
and monitoring with on-site instruments in accordance with Part V of the
Verification Annex.
4. Each State Party shall cease immediately all activity at chemical weapons
production facilities specified in paragraph 1, except activity required
for closure.
5. No State Party shall construct any new chemical weapons production
facilities or modify any existing facilities for the purpose of chemical
weapons production or for any other activity prohibited under this Convention.
6. Each State Party shall, immediately after the declaration under Article
III, paragraph 1 (c), has been submitted, provide access to chemical weapons
production facilities specified in paragraph 1, for the purpose of systematicverification
of the declaration through on-site inspection.
7. Each State Party shall:
(a) Close, not later than 90 days after this Convention enters into force
for it, all chemical weapons production facilities specified in paragraph
1, in accordance with Part V of the Verification Annex, and give notice
thereof; and
(b) Provide access to chemical weapons production facilities specified
in paragraph 1, subsequent to closure, for the purpose of systematic verification
through on-site inspection and monitoring with on-site instruments in
order to ensure that the facility remains closed and is subsequently destroyed.
8. Each State Party shall destroy all chemical weapons production facilities
specified in paragraph 1 and related facilities and equipment, pursuant
to the Verification Annex and in accordance with an agreed rate and sequence
of destruction (hereinafter referred to as "order of destruction").
Such destruction shall begin not later than one year after this Convention
enters into force for it, and shall finish not later than 10 years after
entry into force of this Convention. A State Party is not precluded from
destroying such facilities at a faster rate.
9. Each State Party shall:
(a) Submit detailed plans for destruction of chemical weapons production
facilities specified in paragraph 1, not later than 180 days before the
destruction of each facility begins;
(b) Submit declarations annually regarding the implementation of its plans
for the destruction of all chemical weapons production facilities specified
in paragraph 1, not later than 90 days after the end of each annual destruction
period; and
(c) Certify, not later than 30 days after the destruction process has
been completed, that all chemical weapons production facilities specified
in paragraph 1 have been destroyed.
10. If a State ratifies or accedes to this Convention after the 10-year
period bfor destruction set forth in paragraph 8, it shall destroy chemical
weapons production facilities specified in paragraph 1 as soon as possible.
The order of destruction and procedures for stringent verification for
such a State Party shall be determined by the Executive Council.
11. Each State Party, during the destruction of chemical weapons production
facilities, shall assign the highest priority to ensuring the safety of
people and to protecting the environment. Each State Party shall destroy
chemical weapons production facilities in accordance with its national
standards for safety and emissions.
12. Chemical weapons production facilities specified in paragraph 1 may
be temporarily converted for destruction of chemical weapons in accordance
with Part V, paragraphs 18 to 25, of the Verification Annex. Such a converted
facility must be destroyed as soon as it is no longer in use for destruction
of chemical weapons but, in any case, not later than 10 years after entry
into force of this Convention.
13. A State Party may request, in exceptional cases of compelling need,
permission to use a chemical weapons production facility specified in
paragraph 1 for purposes not prohibited under this Convention. Upon the
recommendation of the Executive Council, the Conference of the States
Parties shall decide whether or not to approve the request and shall establish
the conditions upon which approval is contingent in accordance with Part
V, Section D, of the Verification Annex.
14. The chemical weapons production facility shall be converted in such
a manner that the converted facility is not more capable of being reconverted
into a chemical weapons production facility than any other facility used
for industrial, agricultural, research, medical, pharmaceutical or other
peaceful purposes not involving chemicals listed in Schedule 1.
15. All converted facilities shall be subject to systematic verification
through on-site inspection and monitoring with on-site instruments in
accordance with Part V, Section D, of the Verification Annex.
16. In carrying out verification activities pursuant to this Article and
Part V of the Verification Annex, the Organization shall consider measures
to avoid unnecessary duplication of bilateral or multilateral agreements
on verification of chemical weapons production facilities and their destruction
among States Parties.
To this end, the Executive Council shall decide to limit the verification
to measures complementary to those undertaken pursuant to such a bilateral
or multilateral agreement, if it considers that:
(a) Verification provisions of such an agreement are consistent with the
verification provisions of this Article and Part V of the Verification
Annex;
(b) Implementation of the agreement provides for sufficient assurance
of compliance with the relevant provisions of this Convention; and
(c) Parties to the bilateral or multilateral agreement keep the Organization
fully informed about their verification activities.
17. If the Executive Council takes a decision pursuant to paragraph 16,
the Organization shall have the right to monitor the implementation of
the bilateral or multilateral agreement.
18. Nothing in paragraphs 16 and 17 shall affect the obligation of a State
Party to make declarations pursuant to Article III, this Article and Part
V of the Verification Annex.
19. Each State Party shall meet the costs of destruction of chemical weapons
production facilities it is obliged to destroy. It shall also meet the
costs of verification under this Article unless the Executive Council
decides otherwise. If the Executive Council decides to limit verification
measures of the Organization pursuant to paragraph 16, the costs of complementary
verification and monitoring by the Organization shall be paid in accordance
with the United Nations scale of assessment, as specified in Article VIII,
paragraph 7.
ARTICLE VI
ACTIVITIES NOT PROHIBITED UNDER THIS CONVENTION
1. Each State Party has the right, subject to the provisions of this Convention,
to develop, produce, otherwise acquire, retain, transfer and use toxic
chemicals and their precursors for purposes not prohibited under this
Convention.
2. Each State Party shall adopt the necessary measures to ensure that
toxic chemicals and their precursors are only developed, produced, otherwise
acquired, retained, transferred, or used within its territory or in any
other place under its jurisdiction or control for purposes not prohibited
under this Convention. To this end, and in order to verify that activities
are in accordance with obligations under this Convention, each State Party
shall subject toxic chemicals and their precursors listed in Schedules
1, 2 and 3 of the Annex on Chemicals, facilities related to such chemicals,
and other facilities as specified in the Verification Annex, that are
located on its territory or in any other place under its jurisdiction
or control, to verification measures as provided in the Verification Annex.
3. Each State Party shall subject chemicals listed in Schedule 1 (hereinafter
referred to as "Schedule 1 chemicals") to the prohibitions on
production, acquisition, retention, transfer and use as specified in Part
VI of the Verification Annex. It shall subject Schedule 1 chemicals and
facilities specified in Part VI of the Verification Annex to systematic
verification
through on-site inspection and monitoring with on-site instruments in
accordance with that Part of the Verification Annex.
4. Each State Party shall subject chemicals listed in Schedule 2 (hereinafter
referred to as "Schedule 2 chemicals") and facilities specified
in Part VII of the Verification Annex to data monitoring and on-site verification
in accordance with that Part of the Verification Annex.
5. Each State Party shall subject chemicals listed in Schedule 3 (hereinafter
referred to as "Schedule 3 chemicals") and facilities specified
in Part VIII of the Verification Annex to data monitoring and on-site
verification in accordance with that Part of the Verification Annex.
6. Each State Party shall subject facilities specified in Part IX of the
Verification Annex to data monitoring and eventual on-site verification
in accordance with that Part of the Verification Annex unless decided
otherwise by the Conference of the States Parties pursuant to Part IX,
paragraph 22, of the Verification Annex.
7. Not later than 30 days after this Convention enters into force for
it, each State Party shall make an initial declaration on relevant chemicals
and facilities in accordance with the Verification Annex.
8. Each State Party shall make annual declarations regarding the relevant
chemicals and facilities in accordance with the Verification Annex.
9. For the purpose of on-site verification, each State Party shall grant
to the inspectors access to facilities as required in the Verification
Annex.
10. In conducting verification activities, the Technical Secretariat shall
avoid undue intrusion into the State Party's chemical activities for purposes
not prohibited under this Convention and, in particular, abide by the
provisions set forth in the Annex on the Protection of Confidential Information
(hereinafter referred to as "Confidentiality Annex").
11. The provisions of this Article shall be implemented in a manner which
avoids hampering the economic or technological development of States Parties,
and international cooperation in the field of chemical activities for
purposes not prohibited under this Convention including the international
exchange of scientific and technical information and chemicals and equipment
for the production, processing or use of chemicals for purposes not prohibited
under this Convention.
ARTICLE VII
NATIONAL IMPLEMENTATION MEASURES
General undertakings
1. Each State Party shall, in accordance with its constitutional processes,
adopt the necessary measures to implement its obligations under this Convention.
In particular, it shall:
(a) Prohibit natural and legal persons anywhere on its territory or in
any other place under its jurisdiction as recognized by international
law from undertaking any activity prohibited to a State Party under this
Convention, including enacting penal legislation with respect to such
activity;
(b) Not permit in any place under its control any activity prohibited
to a State Party under this Convention; and
(c) Extend its penal legislation enacted under subparagraph (a) to any
activity prohibited to a State Party under this Convention undertaken
anywhere by natural persons, possessing its nationality, in conformity
with international law.
2. Each State Party shall cooperate with other States Parties and afford
the appropriate form of legal assistance to facilitate the implementation
of the obligations under paragraph 1.
3. Each State Party, during the implementation of its obligations under
this Convention, shall assign the highest priority to ensuring the safety
of people and to protecting the environment, and shall cooperate as appropriate
with other State Parties in this regard.
Relations between the State Party and the Organization
4. In order to fulfil its obligations under this Convention, each State
Party shall designate or establish a National Authority to serve as the
national focal point for effective liaison with the Organization and other
States Parties. Each State Party shall notify the Organization of its
National Authority at the time that this Convention enters into force
for it.
5. Each State Party shall inform the Organization of the legislative and
administrative measures taken to implement this Convention.
6. Each State Party shall treat as confidential and afford special handling
to information and data that it receives in confidence from the Organization
in connection with the implementation of this Convention. It shall treat
such information and data exclusively in connection with its rights and
obligations under this Convention and in accordance with the provisions
set forth in the Confidentiality Annex.
7. Each State Party undertakes to cooperate with the Organization in the
exercise of all its functions and in particular to provide assistance
to the Technical Secretariat.
ARTICLE VIII
THE ORGANIZATION
A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
1. The States Parties to this Convention hereby establish the Organization
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to achieve the object and purpose
of this Convention, to ensure the implementation of its provisions, including
those for international verification of compliance with it, and to provide
a forum for consultation and cooperation among States Parties.
2. All States Parties to this Convention shall be members of the Organization.
A State Party shall not be deprived of its membership in the Organization.
3. The seat of the Headquarters of the Organization shall be The Hague,
Kingdom of the Netherlands.
4. There are hereby established as the organs of the Organization: the
Conference of the States Parties, the Executive Council, and the Technical
Secretariat.
5. The Organization shall conduct its verification activities provided
for under this Convention in the least intrusive manner possible consistent
with the timely and efficient accomplishment of their objectives. It shall
request only the information and data necessary to fulfil its responsibilities
under this Convention. It shall take every precaution to protect the confidentiality
of information on civil and military activities and facilities coming
to its knowledge in the implementation of this Convention and, in particular,
shall abide by the provisions set forth in the Confidentiality Annex.
6. In undertaking its verification activities the Organization shall consider
measures to make use of advances in science and technology.
7. The costs of the Organization's activities shall be paid by States
Parties in accordance with the United Nations scale of assessment adjusted
to take into account differences in membership between the United Nations
and this Organization, and subject to the provisions of Articles IV and
V. Financial contributions of States Parties to the Preparatory Commission
shall be deducted in an appropriate way from their contributions to the
regular budget. The budget of the Organization shall comprise two separate
chapters, one relating to administrative and other costs, and one relating
to verification costs.
8. A member of the Organization which is in arrears in the payment of
its financial contribution to the Organization shall have no vote in the
Organization if the amount of its arrears equals or exceeds the amount
of the contribution due from it for the preceding two full years. The
Conference of the States Parties may, nevertheless, permit such a member
to vote if it is satisfied that the failure to pay is due to conditions
beyond the control of the member.
B. THE CONFERENCE OF THE STATES PARTIES
Composition, procedures and decision-making
9. The Conference of the States Parties (hereinafter referred to as "the
Conference") shall be composed of all members of this Organization.
Each member shall have one representative in the Conference, who may be
accompanied by alternates and advisers.
10. The first session of the Conference shall be convened by the depositary
not later than 30 days after the entry into force of this Convention.
11. The Conference shall meet in regular sessions which shall be held
annually unless it decides otherwise.
12. Special sessions of the Conference shall be convened:
(a) When decided by the Conference;
(b) When requested by the Executive Council;
(c) When requested by any member and supported by one third of the members;
or
(d) In accordance with paragraph 22 to undertake reviews of the operation
of this Convention.
Except in the case of subparagraph (d), the special session shall be convened
not later than 30 days after receipt of the request by the Director-General
of the Technical Secretariat, unless specified otherwise in the request.
13. The Conference shall also be convened in the form of an Amendment
Conference in accordance with Article XV, paragraph 2.
14. Sessions of the Conference shall take place at the seat of the Organization
unless the Conference decides otherwise.
15. The Conference shall adopt its rules of procedure. At the beginning
of each regular session, it shall elect its Chairman and such other officers
as may be required. They shall hold office until a new Chairman and other
officers are elected at the next regular session.
16. A majority of the members of the Organization shall constitute a quorum
for the Conference.
17. Each member of the Organization shall have one vote in the Conference.
18. The Conference shall take decisions on questions of procedure by a
simple majority of the members present and voting. Decisions on matters
of substance should be taken as far as possible by consensus. If consensus
is not attainable when an issue comes up for decision, the Chairman shall
defer any vote for 24 hours and during this period of deferment shall
make every effort to facilitate achievement of consensus, and shall report
to the Conference before the end of this period. If consensus is not possible
at the end of 24 hours, the Conference shall take the decision by a two-thirds
majority of members present and voting unless specified otherwise in this
Convention. When the issue arises as to whether the question is one of
substance or not, that question shall be treated as a matter of substance
unless otherwise decided by the Conference by the majority required for
decisions on matters of substance.
Powers and functions
19. The Conference shall be the principal organ of the Organization. It
shall consider any questions, matters or issues within the scope of this
Convention, including those relating to the powers and functions of the
Executive Council and the Technical Secretariat. It may make recommendations
and take decisions on any questions, matters or issues related to this
Convention raised by a State Party or brought to its attention by the
Executive Council.
20. The Conference shall oversee the implementation of this Convention,
and act in order to promote its object and purpose. The Conference shall
review compliance with this Convention. It shall also oversee the activities
of the Executive Council and the Technical Secretariat and may issue guidelines
in accordance with this Convention to either of them in the exercise of
their functions.
21. The Conference shall:
(a) Consider and adopt at its regular sessions the report, programme and
budget of the Organization, submitted by the Executive Council, as well
as consider other reports;
(b) Decide on the scale of financial contributions to be paid by States
Parties in accordance with paragraph 7;
(c) Elect the members of the Executive Council;
(d) Appoint the Director-General of the Technical Secretariat (hereinafter
referred to as "the Director-General");
(e) Approve the rules of procedure of the Executive Council submitted
by the latter;
(f) Establish such subsidiary organs as it finds necessary for the exercise
of its functions in accordance with this Convention;
(g) Foster international cooperation for peaceful purposes in the field
of chemical activities;
(h) Review scientific and technological developments that could affect
the operation of this Convention and, in this context, direct the Director-General
to establish a Scientific Advisory Board to enable him, in the performance
of his functions, to render specialized advice in areas of science and
technology relevant to this Convention, to the Conference, the Executive
Council or States Parties. The Scientific Advisory Board shall be composed
of independent experts appointed in accordance with terms of reference
adopted by the Conference;
(i) Consider and approve at its first session any draft agreements, provisions
and guidelines developed by the Preparatory Commission;
(j) Establish at its first session the voluntary fund for assistance in
accordance with Article X;
(k) Take the necessary measures to ensure compliance with this Convention
and to redress and remedy any situation which contravenes the provisions
of this Convention, in accordance with Article XII.
22. The Conference shall not later than one year after the expiry of the
fifth and the tenth year after the entry into force of this Convention,
and at such other times within that time period as may be decided upon,
convene in special sessions to undertake reviews of the operation of this
Convention. Such reviews shall take into account any relevant scientific
and technological developments. At intervals of five years thereafter,
unless otherwise decided upon, further sessions of the Conference shall
be convened with the same objective.
C. THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Composition, procedure and decision-making
23. The Executive Council shall consist of 41 members. Each State Party
shall have the right, in accordance with the principle of rotation, to
serve on the Executive Council. The members of the Executive Council shall
be elected by the Conference for a term of two years. In order to ensure
the effective functioning of this Convention, due regard being specially
paid to equitable geographical distribution, to the importance of chemical
industry, as well as to political and security interests, the Executive
Council shall be composed as follows:
(a) Nine States Parties from Africa to be designated by States Parties
located in this region. As a basis for this designation it is understood
that, out of these nine States Parties, three members shall, as a rule,
be the States Parties with the most significant national chemical industry
in the region as determined by internationally reported and published
data; in addition, the regional group shall agree also to take into account
other regional factors in designating these three members;
(b) Nine States Parties from Asia to be designated by States Parties located
in this region. As a basis for this designation it is understood that,
out of these nine States Parties, four members shall, as a rule, be the
States Parties with the most significant national chemical industry in
the region as determined by internationally reported and published data;
in addition, the regional group shall agree also to take into account
other regional factors in designating these four members;
(c) Five States Parties from Eastern Europe to be designated by States
Parties located in this region. As a basis for this designation it is
understood that, out of these five States Parties, one member shall, as
a rule, be the State Party with the most significant national chemical
industry in the region as determined by internationally reported and published
data; in addition, the regional group shall agree also to take into account
other regional factors in designating this one member;
(d) Seven States Parties from Latin America and the Caribbean to be designated
by States Parties located in this region. As a basis for this designation
it is understood that, out of these seven States Parties, three members
shall, as a rule, be the States Parties with the most significant national
chemical industry in the region as determined by internationally reported
and published data; in addition, the regional group shall agree also to
take into account other regional factors in designating these three members;
(e) Ten States Parties from among Western European and other States to
be designated by States Parties located in this region. As a basis for
this designation it is understood that, out of these 10 States Parties,
5 members shall, as a rule, be the States Parties with the most significant
national chemical industry in the region as determined by internationally
reported and published data; in addition, the regional group shall agree
also to take into account other regional factors in designating these
five members;
(f) One further State Party to be designated consecutively by States Parties
located in the regions of Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean. As
a basis for this designation it is understood that this State Party shall
be a rotating member from these regions.
24. For the first election of the Executive Council 20 members shall be
elected for a term of one year, due regard being paid to the established
numerical proportions as described in paragraph 23.
25. After the full implementation of Articles IV and V the Conference
may, upon the request of a majority of the members of the Executive Council,
review the composition of the Executive Council taking into account developments
related to the principles specified in paragraph 23 that are governing
its composition.
26. The Executive Council shall elaborate its rules of procedure and submit
them to the Conference for approval.
27. The Executive Council shall elect its Chairman from among its members.
28. The Executive Council shall meet for regular sessions. Between regular
sessions it shall meet as often as may be required for the fulfilment
of its powers and functions.
29. Each member of the Executive Council shall have one vote. Unless otherwise
specified in this Convention, the Executive Council shall take decisions
on matters of substance by a two-thirds majority of all its members. The
Executive Council shall take decisions on questions of procedure by a
simple majority of all its members. When the issue arises as to whether
the question is one of substance or not, that question shall be treated
as a matter of substance unless otherwise decided by the Executive Council
by the majority required for decisions on matters of substance.
Powers and functions
30. The Executive Council shall be the executive organ of the Organization.
It shall be responsible to the Conference. The Executive Council shall
carry out the powers and functions entrusted to it under this Convention,
as well as those functions delegated to it by the Conference. In so doing,
it shall act in conformity with the recommendations, decisions and guidelines
of the Conference and assure their proper and continuous implementation.
31. The Executive Council shall promote the effective implementation of,
and compliance with, this Convention. It shall supervise the activities
of the Technical Secretariat, cooperate with the National Authority of
each State Party and facilitate consultations and cooperation among States
Parties at their request.
32. The Executive Council shall:
(a) Consider and submit to the Conference the draft programme and budget
of the Organization;
(b) Consider and submit to the Conference the draft report of the Organization
on the implementation of this Convention, the report on the performance
of its own activities and such special reports as it deems necessary or
which the Conference may request;
(c) Make arrangements for the sessions of the Conference including the
preparation of the draft agenda.
33. The Executive Council may request the convening of a special session
of the Conference.
34. The Executive Council shall:
(a) Conclude agreements or arrangements with States and international
organizations on behalf of the Organization, subject to prior approval
by the Conference;
(b) Conclude agreements with States Parties on behalf of the Organization
in connection with Article X and supervise the voluntary fund referred
to in Article X;
(c) Approve agreements or arrangements relating to the implementation
of verification activities, negotiated by the Technical Secretariat with
States Parties.
35. The Executive Council shall consider any issue or matter within its
competence affecting this Convention and its implementation, including
concerns regarding compliance, and cases of non-compliance, and, as appropriate,
inform States Parties and bring the issue or matter to the attention of
the Conference.
36. In its consideration of doubts or concerns regarding compliance and
cases of non-compliance, including, inter alia, abuse of the rights provided
for under this Convention, the Executive Council shall consult with the
States Parties involved and, as appropriate, request the State Party to
take measures to redress the situation within a specified time. To the
extent that the Executive Council considers further action to be necessary,
it shall take, inter alia, one or more of the following measures:
(a) Inform all States Parties of the issue or matter;
(b) Bring the issue or matter to the attention of the Conference;
(c) Make recommendations to the Conference regarding measures to redress
the situation and to ensure compliance.
The Executive Council shall, in cases of particular gravity and urgency,
bring the issue or matter, including relevant information and conclusions,
directly to the attention of the United Nations General Assembly and the
United Nations Security Council. It shall at the same time inform all
States Parties of this step.
D. THE TECHNICAL SECRETARIAT
37. The Technical Secretariat shall assist the Conference and the Executive
Council in the performance of their functions. The Technical Secretariat
shall carry out the verification measures provided for in this Convention.
It shall carry out the other functions entrusted to it under this Convention
as well as those functions delegated to it by the Conference and the Executive
Council.
38. The Technical Secretariat shall:
(a) Prepare and submit to the Executive Council the draft programme and
budget of the Organization;
(b) Prepare and submit to the Executive Council the draft report of the
Organization on the implementation of this Convention and such other reports
as the Conference or the Executive Council may request;
(c) Provide administrative and technical support to the Conference, the
Executive Council and subsidiary organs;
(d) Address and receive communications on behalf of the Organization to
and from States Parties on matters pertaining to the implementation of
this Convention;
(e) Provide technical assistance and technical evaluation to States Parties
in the implementation of the provisions of this Convention, including
evaluation of scheduled and unscheduled chemicals.
39. The Technical Secretariat shall:
(a) Negotiate agreements or arrangements relating to the implementation
of verification activities with States Parties, subject to approval by
the Executive Council;
(b) Not later than 180 days after entry into force of this Convention,
coordinate the establishment and maintenance of permanent stockpiles of
emergency and humanitarian assistance by States Parties in accordance
with Article X, paragraphs 7 (b) and (c). The Technical Secretariat may
inspect the items maintained for serviceability. Lists of items to be
stockpiled shall be considered and approved by the Conference pursuant
to paragraph 21(i) above;
(c) Administer the voluntary fund referred to in Article X, compile declarations
made by the States Parties and register, when requested, bilateral agreements
concluded between States Parties or between a State Party and the Organization
for the purposes of Article X.
40. The Technical Secretariat shall inform the Executive Council of any
problem that has arisen with regard to the discharge of its functions,
including doubts, ambiguities or uncertainties about compliance with this
Convention that have come to its notice in the performance of its verification
activities and that it has been unable to resolve or clarify through its
consultations with the State Party concerned.
41. The Technical Secretariat shall comprise a Director-General, who shall
be its head and chief administrative officer, inspectors and such scientific,
technical and other personnel as may be required.
42. The Inspectorate shall be a unit of the Technical Secretariat and
shall act under the supervision of the Director-General.
43. The Director-General shall be appointed by the Conference upon the
recommendation of the Executive Council for a term of four years, renewable
for one further term, but not thereafter.
44. The Director-General shall be responsible to the Conference and the
Executive Council for the appointment of the staff and the organization
and functioning of the Technical Secretariat. The paramount consideration
in the employment of the staff and in the determination of the conditions
of service shall be the necessity of securing the highest standards of
efficiency, competence and integrity. Only citizens of States Parties
shall serve as the Director-General, as inspectors or as other members
of the professional and clerical staff. Due regard shall be paid to the
importance of recruiting the staff on as wide a geographical basis as
possible. Recruitment shall be guided by the principle that the staff
shall be kept to a minimum necessary for the proper discharge of the responsibilities
of the Technical Secretariat.
45. The Director-General shall be responsible for the organization and
functioning of the Scientific Advisory Board referred to in paragraph
21 (h). The Director-General shall, in consultation with States Parties,
appoint members of the Scientific Advisory Board, who shall serve in their
individual capacity. The members of the Board shall be appointed on the
basis of their expertise in the particular scientific fields relevant
to the implementation of this Convention. The Director-General may also,
as appropriate, in consultation with members of the Board, establish temporary
working groups of scientific experts to provide recommendations on specific
issues. In regard to the above, States Parties may submit lists of experts
to the Director-General.
46. In the performance of their duties, the Director-General, the inspectors
and the other members of the staff shall not seek or receive instructions
from any Government or from any other source external to the Organization.
They shall refrain from any action that might reflect on their positions
as international officers responsible only to the Conference and the Executive
Council.
47. Each State Party shall respect the exclusively international character
of the responsibilities of the Director-General, the inspectors and the
other members of the staff and not seek to influence them in the discharge
of their responsibilities.
E. PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES
48. The Organization shall enjoy on the territory and in any other place
under the jurisdiction or control of a State Party such legal capacity
and such privileges and immunities as are necessary for the exercise of
its functions.
49. Delegates of States Parties, together with their alternates and advisers,
representatives appointed to the Executive Council together with their
alternates and advisers, the Director-General and the staff of the Organization
shall enjoy such privileges and immunities as are necessary in the independent
exercise of their functions in connection with the Organization.
50. The legal capacity, privileges, and immunities referred to in this
Article shall be defined in agreements between the Organization and the
States Parties as well as in an agreement between the Organization and
the State in which the headquarters of the Organization is seated. These
agreements shall be considered and approved by the Conference pursuant
to paragraph 21 (i).
51. Notwithstanding paragraphs 48 and 49, the privileges and immunities
enjoyed by the Director-General and the staff of the Technical Secretariat
during the conduct of verification activities shall be those set forth
in Part II, Section B, of the Verification Annex.
ARTICLE IX
CONSULTATIONS, COOPERATION AND FACT-FINDING
1. States Parties shall consult and cooperate, directly among themselves,
or through the Organization or other appropriate international procedures,
including procedures within the framework of the United Nations and in
accordance with its Charter, on any matter which may be raised relating
to the object and purpose, or the implementation of the provisions, of
this Convention.
2. Without prejudice to the right of any State Party to request a challenge
inspection, States Parties should, whenever possible, first make every
effort to clarify and resolve, through exchange of information and consultations
among themselves, any matter which may cause doubt about compliance with
this Convention, or which gives rise to concerns about a related matter
which may be considered ambiguous. A State Party which receives a request
from anotherState Party for clarification of any matter which the requesting
State Party believes causes such a doubt or concern shall provide the
requesting State Party as soon as possible, but in any case not later
than 10 days after the request, with information sufficient to answer
the doubt or concern raised along with an explanation of how the information
provided resolves the matter. Nothing in this Convention shall affect
the right of any two or more States Parties to arrange by mutual consent
for inspections or any other procedures among themselves to clarify and
resolve any matter which may cause doubt about compliance or gives rise
to a concern about a related matter which may be considered ambiguous.
Such arrangements shall not affect the rights and obligations of any State
Party under other provisions of this Convention.
Procedure for requesting clarification
3. A State Party shall have the right to request the Executive Council
to assist in clarifying any situation which may be considered ambiguous
or which gives rise to a concern about the possible non-compliance of
another State Party with this Convention. The Executive Council shall
provide appropriate information in its possession relevant to such a concern.
4. A State Party shall have the right to request the Executive Council
to obtain clarification from another State Party on any situation which
may be considered ambiguous or which gives rise to a concern about its
possible non-compliance with this Convention. In such a case, the following
shall apply:
(a) The Executive Council shall forward the request for clarification
to the State Party concerned through the Director-General not later than
24 hours after its receipt;
(b) The requested State Party shall provide the clarification to the Executive
Council as soon as possible, but in any case not later than 10 days after
the receipt of the request;
(c) The Executive Council shall take note of the clarification and forward
it to the requesting State Party not later than 24 hours after its receipt;
(d) If the requesting State Party deems the clarification to be inadequate,
it shall have the right to request the Executive Council to obtain from
the requested State Party further clarification;
(e) For the purpose of obtaining further clarification requested under
subparagraph (d), the Executive Council may call on the Director-General
to establish a group of experts from the Technical Secretariat, or if
appropriate staff are not available in the Technical Secretariat, from
elsewhere, to examine all available information and data relevant to the
situation causing the concern. The group of experts shall submit a factual
report to the Executive Council on its findings;
(f) If the requesting State Party considers the clarification obtained
under subparagraphs (d) and (e) to be unsatisfactory, it shall have the
right to request a special session of the Executive Council in which States
Parties involved that are not members of the Executive Council shall be
entitled to take part. In such a special session, the Executive Council
shall consider the matter and may recommend any measure it deems appropriate
to resolve the situation.
5. A State Party shall also have the right to request the Executive Council
to clarify any situation which has been considered ambiguous or has given
rise to a concern about its possible non-compliance with this Convention.
The Executive Council shall respond by providing such assistance as appropriate.
6. The Executive Council shall inform the States Parties about any request
for clarification provided in this Article.
7. If the doubt or concern of a State Party about a possible non-compliance
has not been resolved within 60 days after the submission of the request
for clarification to the Executive Council, or it believes its doubts
warrant urgent consideration, notwithstanding its right to request a challenge
inspection, it may request a special session of the Conference in accordance
with Article VIII, paragraph 12 (c). At such a special session, the Conference
shall consider the matter and may recommend any measure it deems appropriate
to resolve the situation.
Procedures for challenge inspections
8. Each State Party has the right to request an on-site challenge inspection
of any facility or location in the territory or in any other place under
the jurisdiction or control of any other State Party for the sole purpose
of clarifying and resolving any questions concerning possible non-compliance
with the provisions of this Convention, and to have this inspection conducted
anywhere without delay by an inspection team designated by the Director-General
and in accordance with the Verification Annex.
9. Each State Party is under the obligation to keep the inspection request
within the scope of this Convention and to provide in the inspection request
all appropriate information on the basis of which a concern has arisen
regarding possible non-compliance with this Convention as specified in
the Verification Annex. Each State Party shall refrain from unfounded
inspection requests, care being taken to avoid abuse. The challenge inspection
shall be carried out for the sole purpose of determining facts relating
to the possible non-compliance.
10. For the purpose of verifying compliance with the provisions of this
Convention, each State Party shall permit the Technical Secretariat to
conduct the on-site challenge inspection pursuant to paragraph 8.
11. Pursuant to a request for a challenge inspection of a facility or
location, and in accordance with the procedures provided for in the Verification
Annex, the inspected State Party shall have.
(a) The right and the obligation to make every reasonable effort to demonstrate
its compliance with this Convention and, to this end, to enable the inspection
team to fulfil its mandate;
(b) The obligation to provide access within the requested site for the
sole purpose of establishing facts relevant to the concern regarding possible
non-compliance; and
(c) The right to take measures to protect sensitive installations, and
to prevent disclosure of confidential information and data, not related
to this Convention.
12. With regard to an observer, the following shall apply:
(a) The requesting State Party may, subject to the agreement of the inspected
State Party, send a representative who may be a national either of the
requesting State Party or of a third State Party, to observe the conduct
of the challenge inspection.
(b) The inspected State Party shall then grant access to the observer
in accordance with the Verification Annex.
(c) The inspected State Party shall, as a rule, accept the proposed observer,
but if the inspected State Party exercises a refusal, that fact shall
be recorded in the final report.
13. The requesting State Party shall present an inspection request for
an on-site challenge inspection to the Executive Council and at the same
time to the Director-General for immediate processing.
14. The Director-General shall immediately ascertain that the inspection
request meets the requirements specified in Part X, paragraph 4, of the
Verification Annex, and, if necessary, assist the requesting State Party
in filing the inspection request accordingly. When the inspection request
fulfils the requirements, preparations for the challenge inspection shall
begin.
15. The Director-General shall transmit the inspection request to the
inspected State Party not less than 12 hours before the planned arrival
of the inspection team at the point of entry.
16. After having received the inspection request, the Executive Council
shall take cognizance of the Director-General's actions on the request
and shall keep the case under its consideration throughout the inspection
procedure. However, its deliberations shall not delay the inspection process.
17. The Executive Council may, not later than 12 hours after having received
the inspection request, decide by a three-quarter majority of all its
members against carrying out the challenge inspection, if it considers
the inspection request to be frivolous, abusive or clearly beyond the
scope of this Convention as described in paragraph 8. Neither the requesting
nor the inspected State Party shall participate in such a decision. If
the Executive Council decides against the challenge inspection, preparations
shall be stopped, no further action on the inspection request shall be
taken, and the States Parties concerned shall be informed accordingly.
18. The Director-General shall issue an inspection mandate for the conduct
of the challenge inspection. The inspection mandate shall be the inspection
request referred to in paragraphs 8 and 9 put into operational terms,
and shall conform with the inspection request.
19. The challenge inspection shall be conducted in accordance with Part
X or, in the case of alleged use, in accordance with Part XI of the Verification
Annex. The inspection team shall be guided by the principle of conducting
the challenge inspection in the least intrusive manner possible, consistent
with the effective and timely accomplishment of its mission.
20. The inspected State Party shall assist the inspection team throughout
the challenge inspection and facilitate its task. If the inspected State
Party proposes, pursuant to Part X, Section C, of the Verification Annex,
arrangements to demonstrate compliance with this Convention, alternative
to full and comprehensive access, it shall make every reasonable effort,
through consultations with the inspection team, to reach agreement on
the modalities for establishing the facts with the aim of demonstrating
its compliance.
21. The final report shall contain the factual findings as well as an
assessment by the inspection team of the degree and nature of access and
cooperation granted for the satisfactory implementation of the challenge
inspection. The Director-General shall promptly transmit the final report
of the inspection team to the requesting State Party, to the inspected
State Party, to the Executive Council and to all other States Parties.
The Director-General shall further transmit promptly to the Executive
Council the assessments of the requesting and of the inspected States
Parties, as well as the views of other States Parties which may be conveyed
to the Director-General for that purpose, and then provide them to all
States Parties.
22. The Executive Council shall, in accordance with its powers and functions,
review the final report of the inspection team as soon as it is presented,
and address any concerns as to:
(a) Whether any non-compliance has occurred;
(b) Whether the request had been within the scope of this Convention;
and
(c) Whether the right to request a challenge inspection had been abused.
23. If the Executive Council reaches the conclusion, in keeping with its
powers and functions, that further action may be necessary with regard
to paragraph 22, it shall take the appropriate measures to redress the
situation and to ensure compliance with this Convention, including specific
recommendations to the Conference. In the case of abuse, the Executive
Council shall examine whether the requesting State Party should bear any
of the financial implications of the challenge inspection.
24. The requesting State Party and the inspected State Party shall have
the right to participate in the review process. The Executive Council
shall inform the States Parties and the next session of the Conference
of the outcome of the process.
25. If the Executive Council has made specific recommendations to the
Conference, the Conference shall consider action in accordance with Article
XII.
ARTICLE X
ASSISTANCE AND PROTECTION AGAINST CHEMICAL WEAPONS
1. For the purposes of this Article, "Assistance" means the
coordination and delivery to States Parties of protection against chemical
weapons, including, inter alia, the following: detection equipment and
alarm systems; protective equipment; decontamination equipment and decontaminants;
medical antidotes and treatments; and advice on any of these protective
measures.
2. Nothing in this Convention shall be interpreted as impeding the right
of any State Party to conduct research into, develop, produce, acquire,
transfer or use means of protection against chemical weapons, for purposes
notprohibited under this Convention.
3. Each State Party undertakes to facilitate, and shall have the right
to participate in, the fullest possible exchange of equipment, material
and scientific and technological information concerning means of protection
against chemical weapons.
4. For the purposes of increasing the transparency of national programmes
related to protective purposes, each State Party shall provide annually
to the Technical Secretariat information on its programme, in accordance
with procedures to be considered and approved by the Conference pursuant
to Article VIII, paragraph 21 (i).
5. The Technical Secretariat shall establish, not later than 180 days
after entry into force of this Convention and maintain, for the use of
any requesting State Party, a data bank containing freely available information
concerning various means of protection against chemical weapons as well
as such information as may be provided by States Parties.
The Technical Secretariat shall also, within the resources available to
it, and at the request of a State Party, provide expert advice and assist
the State Party in identifying how its programmes for the development
and improvement of a protective capacity against chemical weapons could
be implemented.
6. Nothing in this Convention shall be interpreted as impeding the right
of States Parties to request and provide assistance bilaterally and to
conclude individual agreements with other States Parties concerning the
emergency procurement of assistance.
7. Each State Party undertakes to provide assistance through the Organization
and to this end to elect to take one or more of the following measures:
(a) To contribute to the voluntary fund for assistance to be established
by the Conference at its first session;
(b) To conclude, if possible not later than 180 days after this Convention
enters into force for it, agreements with the Organization concerning
the procurement, upon demand, of assistance;
(c) To declare, not later than 180 days after this Convention enters into
force for it, the kind of assistance it might provide in response to an
appeal by the Organization. If, however, a State Party subsequently is
unable to provide the assistance envisaged in its declaration, it is still
under the obligation to provide assistance in accordance with this paragraph.
8. Each State Party has the right to request and, subject to the procedures
set forth in paragraphs 9, 10 and 11, to receive assistance and protection
against the use or threat of use of chemical weapons if it considers that:
(a) Chemical weapons have been used against it;
(b) Riot control agents have been used against it as a method of warfare;
or
(c) It is threatened by actions or activities of any State that are prohibited
for States Parties by Article I.
9. The request, substantiated by relevant information, shall be submitted
to the Director-General, who shall transmit it immediately to the Executive
Council and to all States Parties. The Director-General shall immediately
forward the request to States Parties which have volunteered, in accordance
with paragraphs 7 (b) and (c), to dispatch emergency assistance in case
of use of chemical weapons or use of riot control agents as a method of
warfare, or humanitarian assistance in case of serious threat of use of
chemical weapons or serious threat of use of riot control agents asa method
of warfare to the State Party concerned not later than 12 hours after
receipt of the request. The Director-General shall initiate, not later
than 24 hours after receipt of the request, an investigation in order
to provide foundation for further action. He shall complete the investigation
within 72 hours and forward a report to the Executive Council. If additional
time is required for completion of the investigation, an interim report
shall be submitted within the same time-frame. The additional time required
for investigation shall not exceed 72 hours. It may, however, be further
extended by similar periods. Reports at the end of each additional period
shall be submitted to the Executive Council. The investigation shall,
as appropriate and in conformity with the request and the information
accompanying the request, establish relevant facts related to the request
as well as the type and scope of supplementary assistance and protection
needed.
10. The Executive Council shall meet not later than 24 hours after receiving
an investigation report to consider the situation and shall take a decision
by simple majority within the following 24 hours on whether to instruct
the Technical Secretariat to provide supplementary assistance. The Technical
Secretariat shall immediately transmit to all States Parties and relevant
international organizations the investigation report and the decision
taken by the Executive Council. When so decided by the Executive Council,
the Director-General shall provide assistance immediately. For this purpose,
the Director-General may cooperate with the requesting State Party, other
States Parties and relevant international organizations. The States Parties
shall make the fullest possible efforts to provide assistance.
11. If the information available from the ongoing investigation or other
reliable sources would give sufficient proof that there are victims of
use of chemical weapons and immediate action is indispensable, the Director-General
shall notify all States Parties and shall take emergency measures of assistance,
using the resources the Conference has placed at his disposal for such
contingencies. The Director-General shall keep the Executive Council informed
of actions undertaken pursuant to this paragraph.
ARTICLE XI
ECONOMIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
1. The provisions of this Convention shall be implemented in a manner
which avoids hampering the economic or technological development of States
Parties, and international cooperation in the field of chemical activities
for purposes not prohibited under this Convention including the international
exchange of scientific and technical information and chemicals and equipment
for the production, processing or use of chemicals for purposes not prohibited
under this Convention.
2. Subject to the provisions of this Convention and without prejudice
to the principles and applicable rules of international law, the States
Parties shall:
(a) Have the right, individually or collectively, to conduct research
with, to develop, produce, acquire, retain, transfer, and use chemicals;
(b) Undertake to facilitate, and have the right to participate in, the
fullest possible exchange of chemicals, equipment and scientific and technical
information relating to the development and application of chemistry for
purposes not prohibited under this Convention;
(c) Not maintain among themselves any restrictions, including those in
any international agreements, incompatible with the obligations undertaken
under this Convention, which would restrict or impede trade and the development
and promotion of scientific and technological knowledge in the field of
chemistry for industrial, agricultural, research, medical, pharmaceutical
or other peaceful purposes;
(d) Not use this Convention as grounds for applying any measures other
than those provided for, or permitted, under this Convention nor use any
other international agreement for pursuing an objective inconsistent with
this Convention;
(e) Undertake to review their existing national regulations in the field
of trade in chemicals in order to render them consistent with the object
and purpose of this Convention.
ARTICLE XII
MEASURES TO REDRESS A SITUATION AND TO ENSURE COMPLIANCE, INCLUDING SANCTIONS
1. The Conference shall take the necessary measures, as set forth in paragraphs
2, 3 and 4, to ensure compliance with this Convention and to redress and
remedy any situation which contravenes the provisions of this Convention.
In considering action pursuant to this paragraph, the Conference shall
take into account all information and recommendations on the issues submitted
by the Executive Council.
2. In cases where a State Party has been requested by the Executive Council
to take measures to redress a situation raising problems with regard to
its compliance, and where the State Party fails to fulfil the request
within the specified time, the Conference may, inter alia, upon the recommendation
of the Executive Council, restrict or suspend the State Party's rights
and privileges under this Convention until it undertakes the necessary
action to conform with its obligations under this Convention.
3. In cases where serious damage to the object and purpose of this Convention
may result from activities prohibited under this Convention, in particular
by Article I, the Conference may recommend collective measures to States
Parties in conformity with international law.
4. The Conference shall, in cases of particular gravity, bring the issue,
including relevant information and conclusions, to the attention of the
United Nations General Assembly and the United Nations Security Council.
ARTICLE XIII
RELATION TO OTHER INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS
Nothing in this Convention shall be interpreted as in any way limiting
or detracting from the obligations assumed by any State under the Protocol
for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or Other
Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare, signed at Geneva on
17 June 1925, and under the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development,
Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons
and on Their Destruction, signed at London, Moscow and Washington on 10
April 1972.
ARTICLE XIV
SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
1. Disputes that may arise concerning the application or the interpretation
of this Convention shall be settled in accordance with the relevant provisions
of this Convention and in conformity with the provisions of the Charter
of the United Nations.
2. When a dispute arises between two or more States Parties, or between
one or more States Parties and the Organization, relating to the interpretation
or application of this Convention, the parties concerned shall consult
together with a view to the expeditious settlement of the dispute by negotiation
or by other peaceful means of the parties' choice, including recourse
to appropriate organs of this Convention and, by mutual consent, referral
to the International Court of Justice in conformity with the Statute of
the Court. The States Parties involved shall keep the Executive Council
informed of actions being taken.
3. The Executive Council may contribute to the settlement of a dispute
by whatever means it deems appropriate, including offering its good offices,
calling upon the States Parties to a dispute to start the settlement process
of their choice and recommending a time-limit for any agreed procedure.
4. The Conference shall consider questions related to disputes raised
by States Parties or brought to its attention by the Executive Council.
The Conference shall, as it finds necessary, establish or entrust organs
with tasks related to the settlement of these disputes in conformity with
Article VIII, paragraph 21 (f).
5. The Conference and the Executive Council are separately empowered,
subject to authorization from the General Assembly of the United Nations,
to request the International Court of Justice to give an advisory opinion
on any legal question arising within the scope of the activities of the
Organization. An agreement between the Organization and the United Nations
shall be concluded for this purpose in accordance with Article VIII, paragraph
34 (a).
6. This Article is without prejudice to Article IX or to the provisions
on measures to redress a situation and to ensure compliance, including
sanctions.
ARTICLE XV
AMENDMENTS
1. Any State Party may propose amendments to this Convention. Any State
Party may also propose changes, as specified in paragraph 4, to the Annexes
of this Convention. Proposals for amendments shall be subject to the procedures
in paragraphs 2 and 3. Proposals for changes, as specified in paragraph
4, shall be subject to the procedures in paragraph 5.
2. The text of a proposed amendment shall be submitted to the Director-General
for circulation to all States Parties and to the Depositary. The proposed
amendment shall be considered only by an Amendment Conference. Such an
Amendment Conference shall be convened if one third or more of the States
Parties notify the Director-General not later than 30 days after its circulation
that they support further consideration of the proposal. The Amendment
Conference shall be held immediately following a regular session of the
Conference unless the requesting States Parties ask for an earlier meeting.
In no case shall an Amendment Conference be held less than 60 days after
the circulation of the proposed amendment.
3. Amendments shall enter into force for all States Parties 30 days after
deposit of the instruments of ratification or acceptance by all the States
Parties referred to under subparagraph (b) below:
(a) When adopted by the Amendment Conference by a positive vote of a majority
of all States Parties with no State Party casting a negative vote; and
(b) Ratified or accepted by all those States Parties casting a positive
vote at the Amendment Conference.
4. In order to ensure the viability and the effectiveness of this Convention,
provisions in the Annexes shall be subject to changes in accordance with
paragraph 5, if proposed changes are related only to matters of an administrative
or technical nature. All changes to the Annex on Chemicals shall be made
in accordance with paragraph 5. Sections A and C of the Confidentiality
Annex, Part X of the Verification Annex, and those definitions in Part
I of the Verification Annex which relate exclusively to challenge inspections,
shall not be subject to changes in accordance with paragraph 5.
5. Proposed changes referred to in paragraph 4 shall be made in accordance
with the following procedures:
(a) The text of the proposed changes shall be transmitted together with
the necessary information to the Director-General. Additional information
for the evaluation of the proposal may be provided by any State Party
and the Director-General. The Director-General shall promptly communicate
any such proposals and information to all States Parties, the Executive
Council and the Depositary;
(b) Not later than 60 days after its receipt, the Director-General shall
evaluate the proposal to determine all its possible consequences for the
provisions of this Convention and its implementation and shall communicate
any such information to all States Parties and the Executive Council;
(c) The Executive Council shall examine the proposal in the light of all
information available to it, including whether the proposal fulfils the
requirements of paragraph 4. Not later than 90 days after its receipt,
the Executive Council shall notify its recommendation, with appropriate
explanations, to all States Parties for consideration. States Parties
shall acknowledge receipt within 10 days;
(d) If the Executive Council recommends to all States Parties that the
proposal be adopted, it shall be considered approved if no State Party
objects to it within 90 days after receipt of the recommendation. If the
Executive Council recommends that the proposal be rejected, it shall be
considered rejected if no State Party objects to the rejection within
90 days after receipt of the recommendation;
(e) If a recommendation of the Executive Council does not meet with the
acceptance required under subparagraph (d), a decision on the proposal,
including whether it fulfils the requirements of paragraph 4, shall be
taken as a matter of substance by the Conference at its next session;
(f) The Director-General shall notify all States Parties and the Depositary
of any decision under this paragraph;
(g) Changes approved under this procedure shall enter into force for all
States Parties 180 days after the date of notification by the Director-General
of their approval unless another time period is recommended by the Executive
Council or decided by the Conference.
ARTICLE XVI
DURATION AND WITHDRAWAL
1. This Convention shall be of unlimited duration.
2. Each State Party shall, in exercising its national sovereignty, have
the right to withdraw from this Convention if it decides that extraordinary
events, related to the subject-matter of this Convention, have jeopardized
the supreme interests of its country. It shall give notice of such withdrawal
90 days in advance to all other States Parties, the Executive Council,
the Depositary and the United Nations Security Council. Such notice shall
include a statement of the extraordinary events it regards as having jeopardized
its supreme interests.
3. The withdrawal of a State Party from this Convention shall not in any
way affect the duty of States to continue fulfilling the obligations assumed
under any relevant rules of international law, particularly the Geneva
Protocol of 1925.
ARTICLE XVII
STATUS OF THE ANNEXES
The Annexes form an integral part of this Convention. Any reference to
this Convention includes the Annexes.
ARTICLE XVIII
SIGNATURE
This Convention shall be open for signature for all States before its
entry into force.
ARTICLE XIX
RATIFICATION
This Convention shall be subject to ratification by States Signatories
according to their respective constitutional processes.
ARTICLE XX
ACCESSION
Any State which does not sign this Convention before its entry into force
may accede to it at any time thereafter.
ARTICLE XXI
ENTRY INTO FORCE
1. This Convention shall enter into force 180 days after the date of the
deposit of the 65th instrument of ratification, but in no case earlier
than two years after its opening for signature.
2. For States whose instruments of ratification or accession are deposited
subsequent to the entry into force of this Convention, it shall enter
into force on the 30th day following the date of deposit of their instrument
of ratification or accession.
ARTICLE XXII
RESERVATIONS
The Articles of this Convention shall not be subject to reservations.
The Annexes of this Convention shall not be subject to reservations incompatible
with its object and purpose.
ARTICLE XXIII
DEPOSITARY
The Secretary-General of the United Nations is hereby designated as the
Depositary of this Convention and shall, inter alia:
(a) Promptly inform all signatory and acceding States of the date of each
signature, the date of deposit of each instrument of ratification or accession
and the date of the entry into force of this Convention, and of the receipt
of other notices;
(b) Transmit duly certified copies of this Convention to the Governments
of all signatory and acceding States; and
(c) Register this Convention pursuant to Article 102 of the Charter of
the United Nations.
ARTICLE XXIV
AUTHENTIC TEXTS
This Convention, of which the Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian
and Spanish texts are equally authentic, shall be deposited with the Secretary-General
of the United Nations.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned, being duly authorized to that effect,
have signed this Convention.
Done at Paris on the thirteenth day of January, one thousand nine hundred
and ninety-three.
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