International seminar dedicated to the problem of chemical weapons dumped at sea started in Vilnius

Published: 1 October 2008 y., Wednesday

Jūros vartai
On 30 September in Vilnius, a seminar, dedicated to the perspectives of international cooperation on solving the problem of chemical weapons dumped at sea, started. The two-day long international seminar is organised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Lithuania.

The goal of the seminar is to remind about the threat of chemical weapons dumped at sea for the environment, health and safety of people. With the help of this event Lithuania seeks to encourage countries to exchange information on chemicals dumped at sea, results of scientific research and concrete advice on the neutralisation or reduction of this threat.

During the seminar, State Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Deividas Matulionis indicated that chemical weapons dumped at sea presented an international, multifaceted problem.

‘About 40 countries acknowledged that they were directly or indirectly connected with the problem of chemical weapons dumped at sea. Respectively bigger awareness of the relics of the past has raised concern to governments and the public regarding potential threats to health, safety and marine environment. The Baltic Sea, at which a large amount of various chemical weapons is dumped, is no exception,’ said D.Matulionis.

At international forums Lithuania consistently raises the issue of chemical weapons dumped at sea. The Lithuanian delegation reminded about these topical issues again on the occasion of marking the tenth anniversary of adopting the Chemical Weapons Convention. This year during the Second Review Conference of the Chemical Weapons Convention the Lithuanian delegation submitted a document, encouraging countries to voluntarily cooperate and to exchange information on chemical weapons dumped at sea. It is expected that this event will give another impetus to find appropriate ways of international cooperation on this important issue.

‘Lithuania thinks that challenges, which are raised by dumped chemical weapons should be receiving broader attention of international organisations,’ said D.Matulionis.

Representatives from 27 countries, which are members of the United Nations, European Union, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and the Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission (or Helsinki Commission), are taking part in the seminar. Representatives from non-governmental organisations and private companies, dealing with chemical weapons dumped at sea, are also participating at/in? the seminar.

Research that was carried out in many countries demonstrates that chemical weapons are dumped at the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the Mediterranean Sea, the North Sea, the Baltic Sea and in other seas. It is known that after the World War II, about 40,000 tons of chemical weapons were dumped at the Baltic Sea. There are about 13,000 tons of toxic warfare materials in the composition of these chemical weapons.

Šaltinis: www.urm.lt
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Smart octopus can use tools

Is the octopus even smarter than first thought? According to researchers in Australia, the answer is a certain yes. more »

Research into serious diseases VS animal protection

How do we find the right balance between the protection of animal rights and research needs? more »

The Lithuanian representative chosen as member of the Scientific and Technical Advisory Body to the Unesco Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage

Representative of Lithuania, Rector of Klaipėda University, Professor Vladas Žulkus was chosen as member of the Scientific and Technical Advisory Body to the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage. more »

Making the grade

Education targets - EU meets one goal but will miss deadline for others. more »

Robot festival in Tokyo

Japan, home to nearly half the world's industrial robots and eyeing a multi-billion industry, is hosting the International Robot Exhibition 2009 in Tokyo. more »

Educational reform in the EU: much has been achieved, but much remains to be done

Despite a general improvement in education and training performance in the EU, progress is too slow, which means that the majority of the reform targets set for 2010 will not be reached. more »

Lithuania's Foreign Minister ant the EHU Academic Comunity discussed the development of the EU-Belarus relations

On 24 November, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vygaudas Ušackas met with the students and teachers of the European Humanities University (EHU) and told them about the decisions that were made during the meeting of the European Union foreign ministers on 16-17 November in Brussels. more »

Third EU young translator contest starts

Pupils from 45 UK schools took on their European counterparts in the third "Juvenes Translatores" translation contest on Tuesday 24 November. more »

Are Europe's teachers getting enough training?

The OECD and the European Commission today present their new report on the “ Teachers’ Professional Development: Europe in international comparison". more »

EU spends more on research

Two EU companies among world’s largest investors in R&D. more »