Relevance: GS-3 (Security, Biosecurity, International Treaties)
At the 50-year review of the Biological Weapons Convention, India warned that the world remains unprepared for bioterrorism, especially from non-state actors, and stressed that the Global South must be central to global biosecurity efforts.
What is the BWC?
- Adopted: 1972 | In force: 1975
- First global treaty to ban an entire category of weapons.
- Prohibits:
- Development
- Production
- Stockpiling
- Transfer of biological and toxin weapons
- Major limitation:
- No verification or compliance mechanism — repeatedly highlighted by India.
India’s Stand
- Strong commitment to preventing misuse of biological materials.
- Proposed a National Implementation Framework to regulate:
- High-risk biological agents
- Reporting of incidents
- Domestic biological research
- Calls for stronger biosecurity for developing nations, citing inequitable access to vaccines and health tools during COVID-19.
- Supports strengthening BWC bodies and monitoring systems.
Bioterrorism – Key Threats
Category | Example | Why It Matters |
| Bacterial agents | Anthrax | High lethality; spores survive long |
| Viral agents | Smallpox | No natural immunity today |
| Toxins | Botulinum toxin | Most lethal biological toxin |
| Misuse of biotechnology | Genetic engineering | Enables modified pathogens |
Q. Consider the following statements regarding the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC):
- It prohibits the development and stockpiling of biological and toxin weapons.
- It has a permanent verification and compliance system.
- India is a signatory to the BWC.
Which of the above statements are correct?
(a) 1 and 3 only (b) 1 only
(c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (a)
(Statement 2 is incorrect because the BWC has no verification mechanism.)
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