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Page last updated at 16:59 GMT, Thursday, 22 May 2008 17:59 UK

Arms body may be decommissioned

John de Chastelain
John de Chastelain has been overseeing the decommissioning of weapons

The body set up to oversee the decommissioning of paramilitary weapons could itself be decommissioned in under two years.

The government is considering the move as part of a process to put pressure on the UDA and UVF to disarm.

If the commission ceases to exist the loyalist groups will be treated as criminal organisations.

There will be no amnesty for moving arms and weapons could be forensically tested and used as evidence.

The international arms body, headed by General John de Chastelain, was set up in 1997.

Since then it has cost nearly £9m - almost £2,000 a day - but this is shared by the British and Irish governments.

The government renews the legislation that allows it to operate each February for a 12-month period.

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BBC NI Home Affairs correspondent Vincent Kearney's reports

The BBC's Home Affairs Correspondent Vincent Kearney said he understood that 2009 would be the last time it is renewed, unless the UVF and UDA begin to decommission during that time.

"The commission has overseen the decommissioning of the IRA's weapons - but the UDA and UVF have kept theirs and show no signs of changing that position," he said.

"So the government is now preparing to step up the pressure."




SEE ALSO
Patience running out over arms
22 May 08 |  Northern Ireland
Loyalist warning on UDA arms move
08 Oct 07 |  Northern Ireland
UDA takes steps towards disarming
06 Oct 07 |  Northern Ireland
UDA won't be pushed on arms deal
05 Oct 07 |  Northern Ireland

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