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With
Iraq’s 12,000-page declaration on its arms programme
having arrived at United Nations Headquarters in New York, the
Security Council Presidency has decided to release the document to
those members with the expertise to assess the risks of
proliferation and other sensitive information in a bid to jumpstart
the review of the text.
In a press statement released late Sunday night, the Council
Presidency – currently held by Colombia – said the
review will be conducted in close coordination and consultation
with the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspections Commission
(UNMOVIC) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and
will assist them “in producing a working version of the
declaration as soon as possible.”
Responding this morning to questions about the Council’s
decision, the Secretary-General told reporters as he entered the UN
complex that he had “no problem” with it. “I
think the Council is the master of its own deliberations,” he
said. “If the Council decided to do that, it is their right
and I will not quibble with that.”
The Secretary-General also counselled patience with the process,
saying the UN weapons inspectors should be allowed time to go
through the text before any comments are made about it. “The
documents have just arrived, and as you all know, the inspectors
will have to review them, analyze them, and report to the
Council,” Mr. Annan said, noting that the process “is
going to take a while.”
The Iraqi declaration, which had been handed over to the UN on
Saturday evening in Baghdad, arrived on Sunday in New York at 8:40
p.m., a spokesman for the world body reported. “Both experts
from UNMOVIC and IAEA have started going through the
material,” Fred Eckhard told the press.
Interviewed by UN Radio, UNMOVIC spokesman Ewen Buchanan said the
initial examination would focus on assessing how to handle the
12,000-page document, including “what is the amount of
text in Arabic, what is the amount of electronic material,
paper material, and how long we reckon it will take us to deal with
it.”
Meanwhile, Hiro Ueki, a spokesman for the inspection teams, said in
Baghdad that an UNMOVIC team returned to the Falluja II site of the
Al-Tariq Company, which includes a factory area. “Two
separate chemical plants are in the factory area and their major
activity is the production of phenol and chlorine,” he said,
noting that the chlorine plant is currently inoperative.
“The site contains a number of tagged dual-use items of
equipment, which were all accounted for,” the spokesman
noted. “The objectives of the visit were successfully
achieved.”
The IAEA inspected Tuwaitha, where five teams used “a wide
range of inspection techniques, ranging from visual inspections to
sampling for detection of any potential radiological activity using
Gamma surveys, water sampling and swipe sampling techniques”
and “started to take a physical inventory of nuclear
materials” from the site, Mr. Ueki said.
At Ash Shakyli, “all buildings were inspected and sampled for
the detection of radiological materials,” he added, while the
IAEA team at Al Qa Qaa began “inventorying known explosive
materials from the past nuclear programme” that had
previously been under the Agency’s control - UN News.