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Campaign begins to start gun treaty negotiations
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 10 - 10 - 2009


Seven countries have launched a
campaign for the U.N. to start negotiations on a new treaty
regulating the global arms trade to help prevent the
illegal transfer of guns that kill and maim thousands every
day, AP reported.
John Duncan, Britain's ambassador for multilateral arms
control and disarmament, said the four-week meeting of the
General Assembly's disarmament committee, which started
Monday, will be «pivotal» in deciding whether to launch
formal negotiations on a new Arms Trade Treaty.
According to a report published this week by the British
relief agency Oxfam and 11 other non-governmental
organizations, some 2.1 million people _ overwhelmingly
civilians _ have died either directly or indirectly as a
result of armed violence since the General Assembly first
voted in December 2006 to work toward a treaty regulating
the growing, multibillion dollar arms trade.
This is the equivalent of more than 2,000 people dying
every day _ worse than one person killed each minute, the
report said.
«There is an overflow of government sponsored and private
illegal armies, ethnic militias and non-state guerrilla
forces,» former U.N. humanitarian chief Jan Egeland, who
now heads the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs,
said in a forward to the report.
«And they are supplied as never before with lethal
weapons by reckless states,» Egeland said. «Only a
forceful, unambiguous and verifiable convention can control
transfers and do away with the networks of illegal arms
brokers that supply our generation's weapons of mass
killings and mass misery.»
Duncan said that after three years of discussions,
Britain, Argentina, Australia, Costa Rica, Finland, Japan
and Kenya have proposed a resolution establishing
negotiations to draft and agree on a treaty.
The idea of a treaty «is still contentious,» Duncan
said. But supporters are hoping the disarmament committee
will support the resolution and the 192-member General
Assembly will approve the measure later this year. That
would pave the way for negotiations leading up to an
international conference in 2012 that would hopefully adopt
the new treaty.
Last year, the assembly overwhelmingly endorsed a working
group to move toward negotiations by a vote of 147-2, with
the U.S. and Zimbabwe casting «no» votes. Others were
either absent or abstained.
Whether President Barack Obama's administration will now
back negotiations remains to be seen.
Gun control is a hotly contentious issue in the United
States, where the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
guarantees citizens the right to «keep and bear arms,»
and powerful lobby groups routinely oppose almost every
effort to restrict gun sales and ownership _ and usually
win.
Supporters of a new treaty stress that it will not
interfere with legal arms sales but will target illegal
weapons transfers.
The U.S. statement to the disarmament committee, delivered
Tuesday by Ellen Tauscher, the undersecretary of state for
arms control and international security, focused on Obama's
proposals to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and move
toward disarmament. It made no mention of conventional
weapons or an Arms Trade Treaty.
A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak publicly, said the
administration was still reviewing its position on a
treaty.
Many countries in Europe, Africa and Latin America are
backing the campaign to launch negotiations on an Arms
Trade Treaty.
Nigeria's deputy U.N. ambassador warned that the
circulation of illicit weapons in west Africa «is fast
turning the region into a major transit point for illicit
trafficking in arms and drugs» and facilitating the growth
of criminal syndicates.
Paul van den Ijssel, the Netherlands ambassador to the
U.N. Conference on Disarmament in Geneva, told a forum that
a strong international treaty is needed to straighten out
«patchwork arrangements» in different countries and
regions.
Brig. Gen. Mujahid Alam, a retired Pakistani officer with
the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Congo, said «free and
unabated trafficking of weapons, in particular small
arms,» in the Great Lakes region of central Africa is one
of the major causes fueling the war in Congo, which has
claimed 5 million lives since 1998.
He predicted that agreement on an Arms Trade Treaty will
not happen quickly and suggested that the U.N. and the
international community consider a pilot project in the
Great Lakes region to test possible treaty provisions to
curb illegal weapons transfers.


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