Independent International Commission on Decommissioning
The Independent International Commission on Decommissioning (IICoD) was established to oversee the decommissioning of paramilitary weapons in Northern Ireland, as part of the peace process.The International Body, set up during the ceasefires to report on how decommissioning might be achieved, presented its report on 22nd January 1996. This recommended that the decommissioning process should take place "to the satisfaction of an independent commission". The Decommissioning Act, 1997 in Ireland and the Northern Ireland Arms Decommissioning Act 1997 in the United Kingdom enabled such a body, which was then set up in an agreement between the British and Irish governments on 26 August 1997.
The Commission was made up of:
- General John de Chastelain, the Chairman, from Canada
- Brigadier Tauno Nieminen, from Finland, and
- Andrew D. Sens, from the USA
- consulting with the two governments, the participants in the ongoing negotiations in Northern Ireland, and other relevant groups,
- devising and presenting to the governments a set of proposals on how to achieve decommissioning,
- facilitating the process by observing, monitoring and verifying decommissioning, and receiving and auditing arms, and
- reporting periodically on progress.
In the event, progress on decommissioning was disappointingly slow, and the two-year target was not met.