A team of 15 Japanese experts arrived in northeast China's
Heilongjiang Province on Tuesday to deal with
677 newly discovered chemical weapons.
They will differentiate, register, pack and seal up the
abandoned weapons in the next few days and then transfer them to a
temporary storage site, local authorities said.
The stored weapons will be destroyed, according to a Japanese
official.
The weapons were excavated in Suihua City between June 27 and
July 2 when workers were laying the foundations of a shopping mall
in the downtown area. Some of the weapons had fuses.
The urban population of Suihua is 1.44 million. The weapons were
quickly removed to a safe place.
Four accidents took place from 2003 to 2005 when abandoned
chemical weapons poisoned 49 Chinese people, one of whom died.
The weapons, laid during World War II, were abandoned when the
Japanese retreated.
It is not yet known how many chemical weapons are left. From
February 1995 to April 2006, Chinese and Japanese experts retrieved
37,499 such weapons.
According to the Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons
and their Destruction signed by the Chinese and Japanese
Governments that came into effect in 1997, Japan is duty-bound to
destroy all abandoned weapons.
On July 10, Japanese experts helped to safely transport 210
chemical weapons in Heilongjiang's Ning'an City to the storage area
located there.
China has established seven storage areas for abandoned chemical
weapons, three of which are in Heilongjiang.
Japan occupied Heilongjiang in 1931 and surrendered in 1945.
(Xinhua News Agency July 26, 2006)