Proposed Arms Trade Treaty now in the hands of 28 government experts – they must not fail, warn campaigners
The Control Arms campaign: Amnesty International, the International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA) and Oxfam International.
Talks starting today in the UN offer an historic way forward on conventional arms control, say Control Arms campaigners.
The 28 delegates from every continent will sit on the “Group of Governmental Experts in New York, where they will start their first discussions on a global Arms Trade Treaty (ATT).
Hundreds of non-governmental organizations in Control Arms have been campaigning since 2003 for a Treaty which would prohibit arms transfers that fuel conflict, poverty and serious human rights abuses.
While 80% of States broadly support these goals, some sceptical governments wrongly claim that a Treaty would prevent responsible arms transfers for legitimate defence, policing or peacekeeping.
So far there has been huge momentum internationally for the Arms Trade Treaty. The UN overwhelmingly voted to start work on the ATT in 2006 and last year 100 states responded to the Secretary Generals consultation – more than ten times the usual amount.
In addition an array of military leaders, police officers, doctors, parliamentarians, community leaders, human rights workers, celebrities, religious groups, and people forced to flee violence have taken part in Control Arms events and in a Global People’s Consultation to demand tougher controls on the international trade in conventional arms.
Brian Wood, research and policy manager on arms control at Amnesty International said: “Every day we are documenting gross human rights abuses and war crimes perpetrated as a result of the irresponsible trade in conventional arms, including small arms. This Treaty is urgent but it will only be effective if it requires governments to prohibit transfers when there is a clear risk the arms will be used for serious violations of international humanitarian and human rights law.”
Rebecca Peters, director of IANSA said: “This Treaty will bring about a new level of global cooperation. The uncontrolled commerce of small arms and ammunition devastates human lives and seriously hinders sustainable development. The government experts need to take in to account all aspects of the small arms trade- from production and brokering, to transit and logistics."
Anna MacDonald, head of the Control Arms campaign at Oxfam, said: "These UN arms control talks must not fail. A thousand people each day die from armed violence and many thousands more see their lives destroyed. It is essential we do all we can to reduce these figures. These government experts have an unprecedented opportunity to help prevent armed violence."
Notes to Editors
1. The Group of Governmental Experts (GGE) is appointed by the Secretary General to examine the feasibility, scope and parameters of an Arms Trade Treaty and report back to the UN General Assembly in October 2008. The 28 States with Experts on the GGE are Argentina, Algeria, Australia, Brazil, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Romania, Russian Federation, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, USA, Ukraine, UK.
2. In 2006, 153 states voted in the UN General Assembly to begin work on an Arms Trade Treatyn – 24 states abstained and only the USA voted against.
3. Control Arms has made broad proposals for a global Arms Trade Treaty that would prevent international transfers if it is likely that such equipment will be used for violations of international law, especially international human rights and humanitarian law.
Contact Information
For more information, please call:
Sean Kenny (UK) +44 1865 472 359 or +44 7881 655 715
Join Grow
-
Thx RTs @HealthyPlanetUK @amaryond @humcoalition @VoicesOfAfrica @IndyVoices @fortuny @UNDPDC @nprGlobalHealth @dogacres @AfricaAnalyst6 hours 35 min ago
-
Thx RTs/shouts @UNWomenWatch @GrameenFdn @FAOnews @ACNURBrasil @devex @FAOForestry @ReDefineEurope @dumfriesnw @bluesandfaith @maailmanet6 hours 50 min ago
-
many thanks, @FridaGColumns @msf6 hours 53 min ago
-
Photo of the wk: Young Ahmed holds the keys to 1 of 48 new wash blocks, Zaatari camp #Jordan http://t.co/qOs5BOPh63 #Syria #refugees1 day 12 hours ago
-
1000s homeless again, searching for safety as violence erupts again in eastern #DRC http://t.co/C3cLwXNit3 $1bn WorldBank aid pledge1 day 13 hours ago
-
UN Disaster Risk Reduction Conference: Good, but needs to go further http://t.co/Hm54O1EsXT #GPDRR13 #drr @UNDP @unisdr @odi_development1 day 15 hours ago
-
European #taxhavens are 2/3 of the $150 billion tax loss problem http://t.co/jax7i3jVsd #G8 #taxdodging #transparency1 day 16 hours ago
-
Thx @Food_Tank! Proud 2b in 40 Orgs Shaking Up the Food System list @IFADnews @millenniuminst @OneAcreFund @ONECampaign @rocunited @FAOnews1 day 18 hours ago
-
RT @oxfamgb: Good news of £30m extra funding from @DFID_UK for #Syria. Still need more aid from others & big push for a peace. http://t.co/…1 day 18 hours ago
-
US pushes Europe to amend arms #embargo on Syrian rebels http://t.co/B8KYe8VNQn #SyriaCrisis @StateDept @WilliamJHague @eu_eeas @OxfamEU1 day 19 hours ago
-
+80,000 ppl have been killed & several million displaced since the #SyriaCrisis began; #EU must extend arms embargo http://t.co/JlpzH9egf71 day 19 hours ago
-
RT @Katie_Nguyen1: Another arresting headline from @katymigiro 'Chips for sex: Oxfam explores the lives of #Kenya’s hungry millions' http:…1 day 20 hours ago
-
RT @liviafirth: 1 empowered woman can spark a positive change for her whole community @Oxfam @thecircle_oxfam #SparksthatFly @eco_age1 day 20 hours ago
-
RT @Karl_Schembri: #Syria children nxt to newly installed water tap outside 1 of 48 new wash blocks by @Oxfam in #Zaatari Camp, #Jordan htt…1 day 21 hours ago
-
The #ArmsTreaty can create a safer future for millions, but first it needs signatures. Urge the US to sign! http://t.co/4YUsIawus71 day 23 hours ago

