From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

DC/2734
5 January 2001
Background Release
PREPARATORY COMMITTEE FOR CONFERENCE ON ILLICIT TRADE IN SMALL ARMS TO
TAKE  PLACE AT HEADQUARTERS 8 - 19 JANUARY

When the Preparatory Committee for the upcoming United Nations
Conference on
the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects
meets  for the second time from 8 to 19 January at United Nations
Headquarters in New York, it is expected to examine further the delicate
question of balancing the sovereign right of States to safeguard their
national security with the pressing need to regulate the proliferation
of small arms and light weapons.
Called a "global problem without a passport" by the
Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs, JAYANTHA DHANAPALA, the
illicit small arms trade will be the focus of an international
Conference to be held in New York from 9 to 20 July.
The disarmament Conference -- the first since 1987 -- is considered to
be a milestone in the Organization's history. Following intensified
debate on the subject during the fifty-fourth session of the First
Committee (Disarmament and International Security), the
General Assembly decided in December 1999 to convene the Conference and
establish the Preparatory Committee.
The Committee was asked to recommend to the Conference draft final
documents that might include a programme of action and a political
declaration, rules of procedure and modalities for the attendance of
civil society groups. Following the opening of the session
Monday afternoon and the completion of the Bureau, the Preparatory
Committee will proceed to exchanges of views on substantive and
procedural issues.  Working groups will likely be established to
consider the formulation of the following:  measures to prevent, combat
and eliminate the illicit manufacture, acquisition, stockpiling and
transfer of small arms and light weapons; measures related to stockpile
management, safe storage and
destruction of illicit surplus small arms and light weapons; and
measures related to transparency, confidence-building and exchange of
information. Also under consideration will be measures to prevent
diversion from legal to illegal trades, including rokering-related
activities, measures related to marking, record-keeping and tracing of
small arms and light weapons; measures related to civilian possession of
those arms; and possible actions concerning post-conflict situations,
including weapons collection and disposal,
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration programmes.  No formal
general
debate is scheduled.
A working paper by the Conference Chairman, Carlos Dos Santos
(Mozambique), will serve as the basis of a discussion on the
Conference's objectives:
to strengthen or develop norms at the global, regional and national
levels that would reinforce and further coordinate efforts to prevent
and combat the illicit trade in small arms and light weapons; to develop
agreed international measures to prevent and combat
illicit trafficking in and manufacturing of those weapons and to reduce
excessive and destabilizing accumulations and transfers worldwide.
The Chairman calls for particular emphasis on conflict regions and areas
where
serious problems of proliferation have to be addressed urgently.
The Conference should seek to mobilize the political will of the
international
community and promote States' responsibility with a view to preventing
the illicit export, import, transit and retransfer of small arms and
light weapons. Participants of the First Preparatory Committee session,
held in New York from 28 February to 3 March 2000, determined the dates
and venue of the second and third Committee sessions, with the third to
be held in New York from 19 to 30 March.
A decision was deferred, however, on the Conference dates and venue,
which was later resolved by the fifty-fifth General Assembly in
December.
Action is pending on the inclusion of non-governmental organizations
(NGOs).  Some delegations had expressed concern that the participation
of NGOs -- many of which approach the small arms debate from
perspectives that encompass human rights and social and economic
development issues rather than from a purely disarmament perspective --
could over-politicize the debate and risk its success.  Also pending
under the draft rules of procedure is a recommendation about whether the
Conference will adopt its decisions by consensus or vote. During the
Committee's general debate last February-March, widespread agreement
emerged on the need for the Conference to formulate practical solutions
that were comprehensive and achievable.
Delegates emphasized the importance of examining the cycles of supply
and demand and of developing agreed norms for security and the safe
management of official stockpiles.  Disagreement persisted on the scope
of the Conference, however, centring on whether discussions should be
limited to the illicit arms trade and related problems or whether they
should include also the issue of legal trade.
It is estimated that more than half of the legal weapons sales become
illegal over time.  Opponents of addressing the link with legal trade
argue that such a debate would exceed the Conference's mandate and
encroach on the right to self-defence. Others urged that the Conference
strike a balance between a pure disarmament approach based on arms
control and reductions and a contextual one that was sensitive to
priority areas.  The wanton mass destruction and suffering caused by
small arms and light weapons had compelled the representative of Sierra
Leone to call for an outright ban on their sale to countries sharing
contiguous borders with conflict areas.  Other calls were made for an
international action plan establishing regional and international norms,
with provisions on export controls, brokering, marking, transparency and
information exchange, as well
as on the disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of
ex-combatants.  An
integrated approach would address the activities of buyers, sellers,
brokers and governments, they said.  Also emphasized was the need for
supplier nations to exercise utmost restraint in the field of small arms
sales and implement legislation to monitor the activities of arms
brokers. The issue first appeared on the international political agenda
in December 1995 when the General Assembly requested the
Secretary-General, with the assistance of a panel of experts, to report
on the nature and causes of small arms accumulation and transfer, and on
ways and means to prevent and reduce them.  In that report, submitted in
August 1997 (document A/52/298), the Panel of Governmental Experts on
Small Arms found that almost every part of the Organization was dealing
with the consequences of recent armed conflicts fought mostly with small
arms and light weapons.
Subsequent to a follow-up Assembly resolution in December 1997, a Group
of Governmental Experts on Small Arms was established to assist the
Secretary-General in preparing a report on the progress made in
implementing the 24 recommendations of the
Panel and on further actions to be taken (document A/54/258). The Group
of Governmental Experts was also asked to make recommendations on the
objective,
scope, agenda, dates, venue and preparatory committee of this
Conference. Among its recommendations, the Group proposed that the
Conference consider a broad range of measures to reinforce and further
coordinate efforts to prevent, combat and eradicate the illicit trade in
small arms and light weapons.  The Group noted that much of the trade in
small arms and light weapons consists of legal transfers to meet the
legitimate needs of States for self-defence, to maintain public security
within the rule of law and to enable participation in United Nations
peacekeeping operations.

Since 1997, a number of global and regional initiatives have emerged: a
moratorium on the Importation, Exportation and Manufacture of Small Arms
and Light Weapons in West Africa by the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS); the July 1998 Inter-American Conventional
against the Illicit Manufacturing and Trafficking in Firearms,
Ammunition, Explosives and Other Related Materials; the European Union
Joint Action on Small Arms; the July 1999 Decision on the Proliferation,
Circulation and Illicit Trafficking of Small Arms and Light Weapons
taken by the heads of State and Government of the Organization of
African Unity (OAU)); and the August 1999 Decisions of the Council of
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) on the
Prevention and Combating of Illicit Trafficking in Small Arms and
Related Crimes.  Presently, negotiations are under way in Vienna on a
legally binding Protocol against the Illicit Manufacturing of and
Trafficking in Firearms, Their Parts and Components and Ammunition, to
supplement the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized
Crime.  Once concluded, the draft Protocol will provide an
international law enforcement mechanism for crime prevention and the
prosecution of traffickers.  The Protocol may include articles
establishing internationally recognized standards and provisions
regarding marking, registration and traceability of firearms. Other
highlights from 2000 include the Flame of Peace lit in Agadez, Niger on
25 September, which destroyed some 1,300 guns, symbolizing the formal
end of the armed rebellion and the commitment of Niger to reconciliation
and peace.  In November, representatives of 22 Latin American and
Caribbean countries met in Brazil to seek a common regional approach to
the issue of illicit trafficking in small arms and light weapons in
preparation for the international small arms Conference.  The outcome
was the so-called "Brasilia Declaration", which called for the
Conference to adopt a political declaration and a global
programme of action while taking into account the right to self-defence
and the uniqueness of States. Â Also in November, the report of the
Secretary-General on methods of destruction of small arms, light
weapons, ammunition and explosives (document S/2000/1092) was issued.
Requested by the Security Council and designed as a reference manual to
assist Member States in the disposal of weapons voluntarily surrendered
by civilians or retrieved from former combatants, the work is a
practical tool for addressing what the Secretary-General has called "one
of the gravest threats to
international peace and security in the new millennium".  "In a world
awash with small arms", he says, "that will be no small achievement".


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