Since September 2016, Germany has helped to destroy the last stockpiles of chemicals from Libya’s former chemical weapons program.
Some 500 tonnes of dangerous dual-use chemicals were successfully destroyed in an environmentally safe manner over the past months, through a complicated procedure and under the supervision of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).
The chemicals date back to the Gaddafi era and had to be disposed of in accordance with the Chemical Weapons Convention.
In 2016, Libya requested assistance from the international community for the destruction of these chemicals. In response to this request, both the OPCW and the United Nations Security Council decided to grant Libya the required assistance.
Germany and other OPCW member states had declared their willingness to assist Libya in a joint effort. The cost of destroying the stockpiles was covered by the United States and Germany.
Destruction of the toxic chemicals was carried out in Munster by the state-owned company GEKA, which is responsible for disposing of chemical warfare agents and has long-standing expertise in this field.
To mark this milestone, a ceremony will be held at GEKA in Munster, Lower Saxony, on 11 January 2018. It will be attended by State Secretary Dr. Suder (Federal Ministry of Defense), Ms Susanne Baumann, Deputy Federal Government Commissioner for Disarmament and Arms Control, and Ambassador Ahmet Üzümcü, Director-General of the OPCW, as well as by a Libyan high-level representative.