ARMS TRADE NEWSWIRE
For personal, noncommercial use only

June 13, 2001

HEADLINES:

* China fields fast-attack vehicle
* EADS and Rosaviakosmos detail co-operation drive
* Rep. Conyers Calls For Investigation Of Israeli Arms Violations
* Two plead guilty in scheme to ship military parts to Iran
* U.S. To Offer Poland Up To $4.3 Billion In F-16s And Equipment
* European Consortium Willing To Meet ROK's Offset Requirements for Fighter
Project
* Focus on renewal of small arms moratorium
* Beijing's Arms Sale Won't Net Sanctions

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IRIN - June 11, 2001

Focus on renewal of small arms moratorium

West African civil society groups have urged the subregion's leaders to
renew a three-year moratorium on the import, export and manufacture of small
arms that expires this year and "ensure its effective and efficient
implementation".

Participants in a civil society consultation on the moratorium, held on 7-9
June in Accra, Ghana, also called on the UN system to "pursue its political,

technical and financial support to the moratorium" and declare the illicit
trade in small arms a "crime against peace and humanity" to be punished as
such.

Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) signed the 'Declaration
of a Moratorium on Importation, Exportation and Manufacture of Light Weapons
in West Africa' on 31 October 1998 in Abuja, Nigeria. They followed this up
on 10 December 1999, by approving a 'Code of Conduct for the Implementation
of the Moratorium' in Lome, Togo.

Encouraging signs

Although the moratorium was a political initiative and not legally binding,
the fact that some states had applied for exemptions to buy weapons - as
prescribed in the code of conduct - was an encouraging sign, Afi Yakubu of
the Foundation for Security and Development in Africa (FOSDA), said.

"It is on record that countries such as Ghana, The Gambia, Senegal, Cote
d'Ivoire and Nigeria (have) actually sought exemption from the ECOWAS
executive secretary to import small arms for training the police or armed
forces, or for peacekeeping in Sierra Leone," she said. "Five years ago this

would have been unheard of."

However, she said, there had been "one or two violations" by countries and
the moratorium had failed to curtail the recycling of weapons from one
conflict zone to another and there were still wars in the region.

Civil society organisations plan to evaluate the moratorium, propose changes

and help to monitor implementation.

The Code of Conduct requires governments to create national commissions to
"promote and ensure coordination of concrete measures for effective
implementation of the moratorium. However, only about six countries have
done so. The civil society representatives called on ECOWAS leaders to set
up the commissions where they do not exist and strengthen existing ones.
They also urged governments to ensure full participation of civil society in
the commissions", another Code of Conduct requirement.

The Accra meeting's final declaration, issued on Saturday, also calls on
ECOWAS leaders to declare 31 October an annual Moratorium Day.

Effects of the proliferation of small arms

Small and light weapons are those which can be carried by one or two persons

or loaded onto a light vehicle. They include rifles, carabines, pistols,
submachine and machine guns, anti-tank guns, mortars and howitzers. Such
weapons have been used to wage 46 of the estimated 49 wars fought in Africa
between 1970 and 1996.

Each year, there are over 700,000 deaths from small arms, more than half of
them in Africa, according to 'Light Weapons, the Making of the Moratorium',
a study published in April by the UN Regional Centre for Peace and
Disarmament in Africa, based in Lome, Togo, in cooperation with the
Norwegian Institute of International Affairs.

Yakubu said there were an estimated 100 million small arms in the hands of
non-state actors in Africa. The proliferation of such weapons was the major
factor in the ethnic and religious strife, political instability and violent
crime on the continent, she said.

Within West Africa, examples of the effects of small arms abound, including
the hundreds of thousands of people displaced by conflicts in Guinea,
Liberia, Senegal and Sierra Leone. The proliferation of small arms and light
weapons in West Africa "undermines good governance, violates fundamental
human rights and jeopardizes economic development, social justice and
peace," the forum noted in its final declaration.

The civil society representatives were also concerned about "the increasing
complexity of the global flow in both licit and illicit small arms and its
close linkages with organised crime", including the trafficking of blood
diamonds, armed robberies, child trafficking, the drug trade, money
laundering and mercenary activities.

Factors that encourage the proliferation of small arms

Factors that encourage the proliferation of small arms in Africa include
problems of governance, such as the mismanagement of resources,
non-adherence to the rule of law, ineffective policing, ethnic domination
and manipulation and the conflicts and political instability they often
cause, according to Dr Olumide Ajayi, programmes manager of the Africa
Leadership Forum in Ota, Nigeria.

Weak national and regional legislation on the manufacture, trade and use of
small weapons were another contributory factor, and "current conflicts are
major vents for the supply and accumulation of small arms," he said.

Most of these conflicts were over economic resources and involved
international networks of political and business concerns which were
sometimes difficult to decode. This, he added, was why the major prolonged
wars - those most lucrative to weapons dealers - were concentrated in
resource-rich countries such as Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and

Sierra Leone.

Most export control systems in the region were weak and inaction by
governments and officials encouraged the cross-border transfer of arms, he
said. And, he added, "some of the small arms and light weapons being used
within a (given) state are from government armouries."

Comprehensive approach needed

A comprehensive approach to peace building as a means of stemming arms
proliferation was needed, he noted, and in this connection the principles of
the Conference on Security, Stability, Development and Cooperation in Africa

were particularly relevant.

The CSSDCA, proposed in 1991 by the ALF, amended with inputs from civil
society organisations in April 2000 and adopted by the Organisation of
African Unity at its 36th summit in Togo in July 2000, is a standing
conference that meets every two years. Its components are security,
stability, development and cooperation.

Two of the principles on which its security component is anchored are that
measures should be taken to prevent or contain conflicts before they become
violent confrontations, and that Africa needs a framework of common and
collective continental security. African governments must also be guided by
the principles of good neighbourliness and peaceful resolution of conflicts,

and national and continental self-reliance in certain strategic areas are
vital for Africa's security and must cover military and non-military
aspects.

The idea that security, including the issue of small arms, needs to be
looked at from a broad perspective, was an underlying theme at the
consultation.

"Real security lies in development, in the sustained improvement of people's
living standards," Togba na Tipoteh, president of the Movement for Justice
in Africa, told IRIN.

Other calls

Saturday's Accra Declaration also urged the international community to
continue and strengthen its support for the moratorium.

It called on the United Nations to adopt a convention against small arms and

an international marking regime on small arms so as to make it easier to
trace such weapons, especially when they are traded illegally.

The forum was attended by academics, representatives of non-governmental
organisations, religious groups, national commissions on small arms, some
West African armed forces and other bodies.

It was organised by two Accra-based research and advocacy institutions, the

African Security Dialogue and Research (ASDR) and FOSDA, and the UN
Programme of Coordination and Assistance for Development (PCASED),
headquartered in Bamako, Mali.

[PCASED operates within the framework of the UN Regional Centre for Peace
and Disarmament in Africa, and is financed by UNDP and bilateral donors. Its

brief is to help ECOWAS attain the Moratorium's objectives of peace,
security and stability.]

Participants plan to meet again in Freetown, Sierra Leone, in October to
formalise the establishment of a West African network on small arms that
will coordinate civil society's struggle against the proliferation of such
weapons.

In the meantime, they hope to generate international support for the
moratorium at the United Nations Conference on Small Arms in New York from 9

to 20 July 2001. With a view to ensuring effective regional participation in

that meeting, Saturday's declaration urged West African leaders to
"strengthen their delegations by including civil society experts".

They also urged them to organise ceremonial arms destruction ceremonies
during the course of the July conference. So far, Ghana and Mali have
announced that they plan to do so.

Whether or not the moratorium results in a secure West Africa will depend on
the political will of all concerned at all levels, participants said. "We,
civil society, all have an important role to play - the churches, the media,

elders, communities and others," said Emmanuel Erskine, a former commander
of UNIFIL and a member of ASDR's advisory board.

"And, as discussed here, there needs to be cooperation between civil society

and governments to make sure that the aims and objectives of the moratorium
are achieved," he told IRIN.
	
	

This sample is semi-automatically rendered from
the research database, and should not be used
for other than scholarly purposes.


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