Online: | |
Visits: | |
Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
Less than two years after its adoption by the United Nations General Assembly, the Arms Trade Treaty has now received the 50 ratifications needed to trigger its entry into force, the world body announced on 25 September 2014.
The threshold of 50 ratifications was reached earlier today at a joint ceremony held as part of the 2014 Treaty Event – an annual undertaking on the margins of the Assembly’s high-level debate that seeks to promote wider participation in the multilateral treaty framework.
Eight States – Argentina, Bahamas, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Czech Republic, Portugal, Saint Lucia, Senegal and Uruguay – deposited their instruments of ratification today, while Georgia and Namibia signed the Treaty.
“Deadly weaponry continues to find its way into irresponsible hands…”
Adopted by the Assembly in April 2013, the Treaty will enter into force 90 days after the date of the deposit of the 50th instrument of ratification – in this case, 24 December 2014.
“Today we can look ahead with satisfaction to the date of this historic new Treaty’s entry into force. Now we must work for its efficient implementation and seek its universalisation so that the regulation of armaments – as expressed in the Charter of the United Nations – can become a reality once and for all,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told a high-level event on the Treaty.
The poorly regulated trade in arms has adverse humanitarian, human rights and development consequences. Photo: OCHA/ Jihan El Alaily
In a message delivered by High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Angela Kane, Ban said the need for the Treaty remains abundantly clear.
“Deadly weaponry continues to find its way into irresponsible hands. Unscrupulous arms brokers defy UN arms embargoes. Ruthless leaders turn their arsenals on their own citizens. Ammunition depots are poorly guarded. State-owned weapons go missing. Civilian airplanes end up in the crosshairs. End-use certificates are not standardized and can be easily forged. Pirates wield grenade launchers and machine guns against merchant ships. Drug-traffickers outgun police forces.
“Just as with other commodities, the trade in arms should comply with vigorous, internationally agreed standards,” he stated. “All actors involved in the arms trade must be held accountable.”
The Treaty for the first time sets global standards for the transfer of weapons and efforts to prevent their diversion. It regulates all conventional arms within the categories of battle tanks, armoured combat vehicles, large-calibre artillery systems, combat aircraft, attack helicopters, warships, missiles and missile launchers and small arms and light weapons.
Among other provisions, the Treaty includes a prohibition on the transfer of arms which would be used in the commission of genocide, crimes against humanity and certain war crimes. (Source: UN Release).
Read also:
Do You Have the Courage to Ban Nuclear Weapons?
Why Is the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons So Urgent?
Hiroshima: The Myth of “Military Necessity”
Inhumane, Illegal, Immoral and Cruel: a Survivor Account of the Hiroshima Bombing
Anti-Nukes Move from Norway to Bahrain The NPT’s “Unacceptable and Continuous Failure”: Egypt Walks Out
Fed Up With Empty Promises, The Arab May Abandon Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
Middle East Nuclear Free Bid Moves to Finland – Yet Another Lost Chance?
Nuclear Free Middle East “High Priority” Nuclear Free Middle East — Necessary Yet Impossible
Middle East — France’s Fuzzy Face on Nuclear Abolition
‘Strong UN Commitment’ to Nuclear-free Middle East Conference
Which Countries Have Nuclear Weapons and How Many?
Banks, Pension Funds, Insurance Companies in 30 Countries ‘Invest’ Your Money in Nuclear Arms
‘Humanity Could Not Survive a Nuclear War Using Even a Fraction of Existing Arsenals’
Another Lost Chance to Save Middle East from Mass Destruction
Watch The Sky–It May Rain Atomic Bombs
Nuclear Terrorism – Killing 100,000 People Not Very Difficult
Humanitarian Consequences of Nuclear Weapons — Are You Ready to Hit the Gas?
Ecocide, a Catastrophic Consequence of Nuclear Weapons
“Breaking the Nuclear Chain” Campaign
Pressure to Push the Nuclear Genie Back in the Bottle
Germany Resolved to Pave the Way to Nuclear Disarmament
India, Pakistan Engaged in World’s Most Active Nuclear Arms Race
World Nuclear Forces: ‘Fewer But Newer’ Weapons
Desert “Star Wars”, Respect Dignity of Life
Nuclear Dangers, The World Is “One Minute Closer to Midnight” U.S. Spending on Atomic Bombs Doubles UN Budget
Of Dr. Strangelove and the Risk of Using Atomic Bombs World Campain Against False ‘Nuclear Deterrence Doctrine’
The Story of Child Yami and the Atomic Bomb
Obama and How to Save a Quarter of a Trillion Dollars
You Choose: $105 Billion a Year for Health Care or Nuclear Weapons?
Will Israel Attack Iran … Really?
Top US Military Commander: ‘I Don’t Want to Be Complicit’ if Israel Attacks Iran
US Defense Secretary Warns of ‘Pearl Harbor’ Cyber Attack by Iran
Japan May Receive Offensive Military Weapons from US amid Rising Tensions with China, N. Korea
UN Approves Global Arms Trade Treaty
‘Authorized’ Small Arms Trade, Up to USD 8.5 Billion .. Per Year
Filed under: Africa, Asia, Latin America & Caribbean, Market Lords, Middle East, Others-USA-Europe-etc., The Peoples, War Lords