United Nations fails to agree landmark arms-trade treaty
(Reuters) - Delegations from around the world failed on
Friday to agree a landmark U.N. arms-trade treaty to regulate the more than $60
billion industry, opting for further talks and a possible U.N. General Assembly
vote by the end of the year, diplomats said.
More than 170 countries have spent the past month in New
York negotiating a treaty, which needed to be adopted by consensus, so any one
country effectively could have vetoed a deal. Instead, no decision was taken on
a draft treaty.
But this leaves the door open for further talks and a draft
arms-trade treaty could be brought to the 193-nation U.N. General Assembly and
adopted with a two-thirds majority vote. Diplomats said there could be a vote
by the end of the year.
"We feel that we could have agreed (a treaty). It is
disappointing that more time is needed. But an arms-trade treaty is coming -
not today - but soon. We've taken a big step forward," said a spokesman
for Britain's delegation.
One person every minute dies from armed violence around the
world, and arms control activists say a convention is needed to prevent
illicitly traded guns from pouring into conflict zones and fueling wars and
atrocities. They cited conflicts in Syria and elsewhere as examples of why a
treaty is necessary.
While most U.N. member states favored a strong treaty,
activists said there was a small minority of states, including Syria, North
Korea, Iran, Egypt and Algeria, who loudly voiced opposition to global arms
control throughout the negotiations.
But ultimately, arms-control activists blamed the United
States and Russia for the inability to reach a decision on Friday, as both
countries said there was not enough time left for them to clarify and resolve
issues they had with the draft treaty.
"Moving forward, President Obama must show the
political courage required to make a strong treaty that contains strong rules
on human rights a reality," said Scott Stedjan, a senior policy advisor at
Oxfam America, which fights poverty and other injustices.
The draft arms-trade treaty under negotiation required
countries to assess if a proposed arms export could be used to commit or
facilitate a serious violation of international humanitarian or human rights
law.
"The conference's inability to conclude its work on
this much-awaited ATT, despite years of effort of member states and civil
society from many countries, is a setback," said
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed disappointment
the meetings were inconclusive but was encouraged U.N. members will continue
pursuing "this noble goal."
"There is already considerable common ground and states
can build on the hard work that has been done during these negotiations,"
he said.
POLITICAL COURAGE
It covered all conventional arms in the categories of battle
tanks, armored combat vehicles, large-calibre artillery systems, combat
aircraft, attack helicopters, warships, missiles and missile launchers, and
small arms and light weapons.
The treaty would only have come into effect after it was
ratified by 65 countries.
"Today was the day for political courage - not delays
and dithering," said Anna Macdonald, head of arms control at Oxfam.
"Some 50,000 people lost their lives through armed violence during the
course of these month-long negotiations. The out-of-control arms trade must - and
will - be stopped."
The negotiations on the treaty in New York were delayed for
the first week by a dispute over Palestinian participation, which was
eventually resolved by allowing the delegation to sit at the front of the
negotiating hall but without the right to participate as states with voting
rights.
Such procedural bickering was typical of the arms-trade
talks, diplomats say, as countries that would prefer not to have a strong
treaty tried to prevent the negotiations from moving forward. In February,
preparatory talks on the rules nearly collapsed due to procedural wrangling and
other disagreements.
One of the reasons this month's negotiations are taking
place is that the United States, the world's biggest arms trader accounting for
over 40 percent of global conventional arms transfers, reversed U.S. policy on
the issue after Barack Obama became president and decided in 2009 to support a
treaty.
But U.S. officials say Washington insisted in February on
having the ability to veto a weak treaty.
It wanted to protect U.S. domestic rights to bear arms - a
sensitive issue in the United States that has been back in the national
spotlight after a gunman opened fire in a movie theater a week ago, killing 12
people and wounding 58 other.
A U.N. arms trade treaty would not "interfere with the
domestic arms trade and the way a country regulates civilian possession,"
the U.N. Office for Disarmament Affairs has said.
The other five top arms suppliers are Britain, China,
France, Germany and Russia. (Editing by Philip Barbara)
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