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MOSCOW, May 21 (Xinhuanet) -- A top Russian diplomat said Saturday Moscow believes the issue of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq has not been resolved and the United Nations is duty-bound to close the issue.
UN inspectors said in spring 2003 that Iraq did not have ready-to-use
weapons of mass destruction but questions remain regarding Iraq's industrial
capacities, laboratories and materials that were earlier controlled by the
United Nations, Deputy Foreign Minister Yury Fedotov was quoted by Interfax as
saying.
Fedotov is a member of the College of Commissioners of the UN
Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) for Iraq.
"The UNMOVIC and International Atomic Energy Agency mandates in Iraq
were forcefully suspended by the war," Fedotov said three days before a regular
session of the UNMOVIC College of Commissioners in New York.
Cameras were installed earlier to monitor those facilities and
experts regularly reported their condition, but the condition of those
facilities has remained unknown since then, Fedotov said.
"Who should provide this control, especially in the current situation
of continued instability in Iraq? This problem should be resolved," Fedotov
said, adding the United Nations should put an end to the issue.
Russia endorses the return of UN inspectors to Iraq to continue their
work, Fedotov said.
The Russian diplomat also said it is necessary to clarify the fate of
rockets discovered in Iraq before the war whose range slightly exceeded limits
set by the UN Security Council.
Fedotov was apparently referring to Al Samoud 2 missiles, which UN
monitors said Iraq had begun destroying under international pressure before the
war started in March 2003.
"Not all the rockets were destroyed because of the war, and nobody knows now what happened to them. And this is a question," Fedotov said. Enditem |