Advertisement

You will be redirected to the page you want to view in  seconds.

U.N. Chief Makes 11th-hour Plea on Arms Treaty

Jul. 27, 2012 - 08:04AM   |  
By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE   |   Comments
  • Filed Under

UNITED NATIONS — U.N. Chief Ban Ki-moon made a last-ditch effort July 26 to break the deadlock over a landmark treaty to regulate the conventional arms trade, urging countries to “show flexibility.”

Ban issued a statement saying he was concerned at the “very limited progress” made during month-long negotiations in New York, where the world’s biggest arms producers have been haggling over the scope of the treaty.

Since the start, the United States has opposed the inclusion of ammunition, China does not want small arms, and both Russia and China have sought restrictions on references to humanitarian law.

With talks due to end July 27 on the first treaty to regulate the $70 billion-a-year industry, Ban urged the 193 U.N. member states to “show flexibility and work in good faith towards bridging their differences.”

A draft treaty circulated Tuesday was severely criticized by rights groups, including Amnesty International and Oxfam, as full of “ambiguities and loopholes.”

Syria, North Korea, Iran, Cuba, Algeria and other countries have sought from the start to thwart the treaty, diplomats and activists say.

A consensus of all 193 countries involved must agree to the treaty.

Even if the treaty is concluded, the conference has not yet decided how many countries must ratify it to bring it into force.

Ban “remains hopeful that the conference will yield a robust and legally binding Arms Trade Treaty,” the statement released by his spokesman said.

“We owe it to all the innocent civilians who have fallen victim to armed conflict and violence,” the U.N. chief said.

More In World News

Subscribe to Defense News e-Newsletter

Let us help you get caught up on the news. Sign up for the Early Bird Brief and/or Daily News Roundup. Delivered daily, via email.

Subscribe!

Subscribe!

Login to This Week's Digital Edition

Subscribe for Print or Digital delivery today!

Exclusive Events Coverage

In-depth news and multimedia coverage of industry trade shows and conferences.

TRADE SHOWS:

CONFERENCES:

Defensenews TV

  • Sign-up to receive weekly email updates about Vago's guests and the topics they will discuss.