Arms Trade Treaty enters into force offering fresh hope for the protection of civilians in 2015

Published: 23rd December 2014

The United Nations Arms Trade Treaty will "enter-into-force" and become international law on December 24, 2014.

Campaigners hailed a “huge victory” as after more than a decade of campaigning, the Arms Trade Treaty today becomes international law at last. Oxfam has worked with the Control Arms coalition to make this treaty a reality.

The treaty aims to set the highest standards for controlling the $85 billion international trade of arms and ammunition and to cut the supply of weapons to all dictators and human rights abusers. 
    
The ATT has taken only 18 months from opening for signature to entry-into-force. This is one of the fastest approval processes for any multilateral arms treaty, and shows the weight of political support the world’s nations have invested in the treaty.

Oxfam spokesperson Mariam Kemple Hardy said:

“Campaigners around the world have been fighting for this moment for years. This treaty is not just a piece of paper. If robustly implemented, it has the potential to save lives and protect vulnerable civilians.

“The Arms Trade Treaty will transform the global arms business. It can help to shine a spot-light on the end-user. It will no longer be acceptable to look the other way when arms are transferred to regimes that will use them to harm innocent people and violate their human rights.”

Under the new rules in the ATT, before any arms transfer takes place, the supplier government must assess associated risks of the deal against strict criteria, including whether the arms might be used for human rights violations or war crimes. If there is a substantial risk of this happening, the deal cannot be authorized by the seller.

The first Conference of States Parties (CSP) of the Treaty is expected to take place during late-August/early-September next year. At these meetings States and civil society will work together to ensure the treaty is properly implemented and that irresponsible arms trades are being stopped.

To date, 129 states have signed the ATT, with 60 having ratified it. These include major arms exporters such as France, the UK and Germany.

 

This treaty is not just a piece of paper. If robustly implemented, it has the potential to save lives and protect vulnerable civilians.
Mariam Kemple
Head of Humanitarian Campaigning

Notes to editors

The Control Arms Coalition is a global civil society movement of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) campaigning for tough controls on the international arms trade. Control Arms has over 100 organizations working in over 120 countries. It includes major international NGOs such as Oxfam, Amnesty International and Saferworld, as well as many regional and national level organizations.

Contact information

To arrange interviews, please contact Ivan Garcia, Oxfam International Media Officer at ivan.garcia@oxfaminternational.org or +34 620869795.

For updates, please follow @Oxfam.