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Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 40, September - October 1999
IAEA General Conference
43rd Annual General Conference of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA), Vienna, September 27 - October 1, 1999.
Editor's note: on September 30, the General Conference
elected 11 new members to its 35-member Board of Governors. The new
Board, which began work on October 4, consists of: Algeria (new
member), Argentina, Australia, Austria (new member), Belarus (new
member), Bolivia (new member), Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Cuba
(new member), Egypt, Finland (new member), France, Germany, Greece,
India, Indonesia (new member), Japan, Jordan, Nigeria (new member),
Norway, Poland (new member), Republic of Korea (new member),
Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa, Sudan,
Sweden, Syria (new member), United Kingdom, United States, and
Uruguay.
Summary of Conference
"States Strengthen Nuclear Cooperation for New Millenium",
IAEA Press Release 99/13, October 1, 1999.
"The International Atomic Energy Agency's progressive course
into the next century moved forward in important ways this week, as
States resolved to strengthen cooperation in key areas of global
safety, security, and peaceful nuclear development. The Agency's
Member States adopted a series of resolutions at the IAEA General
Conference, which concludes today in Vienna. High-level
governmental delegates from 111 countries are attending the
Conference. ...
The concluding session today was prefaced by an IAEA press
release on the accident, which occurred on 30 September at the
Tokaimura facility in Japan…
Among important steps taken during the week:
- Six more States - Czech Republic, Ecuador, Indonesia, Monaco,
Norway, and Slovakia - signed agreements (Additional Protocols)
that strengthen the Agency's system for preventing the spread of
nuclear weapons. …
- States stressed the urgency of re-establishing the IAEA's
nuclear monitoring and verification activities in Iraq, where the
Agency's last inspections took place some nine months ago. States
also called upon the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)
to comply fully with its IAEA safeguards agreement and to take all
steps that the Agency deems necessary to preserve relevant
information for its verification.
- Under an Initiative launched in September 1997, the United
States, Russia, and the IAEA agreed on further work towards the
Agency's verification of weapon-origin fissile material in the two
States. ...
- States agreed that the Agency should move ahead against illicit
trafficking of nuclear and other radioactive materials. States
invited the IAEA to develop a plan and timetable for enhancing
global cooperation and coordination in preventing, detecting, and
responding to the illegal use of nuclear and other radioactive
materials. ...
For the statement of the Director General, statement on
US-Russia-IAEA discussions, and further information on the
Conference, see the IAEA website at http://www.iaea.org/GC/gc43/
© 1999 The Acronym Institute.
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