UN inspectors stay ready for Iraq return

The United Nations said today its arms inspectors remained ready to return to Baghdad at short notice despite a delay caused …

The United Nations said today its arms inspectors remained ready to return to Baghdad at short notice despite a delay caused by Security Council talks on a new US-drafted resolution on Iraq.

Last week, UN inspectors agreed with Iraqi arms experts on the logistics of a return, four years after inspectors left in December 1998.

The inspectors had planned to return in mid-October but decided to hold off until the UN Security Council made a decision on the United States's tough draft resolution on Iraq.

Mr Mark Gwozdecky, spokesman for the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency, said: "The delay affects the logistics of our return in that we're not making flight reservations yet. But we've had a resumption plan for a long time and are continuing our preparations for the return".

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The UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, whose staff will search for chemical, biological and ballistic weapons, is also ready, with 50 inspectors starting a month-long training course in Vienna today.

The United States and Britain accuse Iraq of acquiring or seeking to acquire nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and are pushing for a UN resolution allowing use of force if Iraq fails to co-operate with intrusive inspections.

Baghdad has repeatedly rejected the allegations.