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  • AI: Strengthening Compliance With UN Arms Embargoes

    STRENGTHENING COMPLIANCE WITH UN ARMS EMBARGOES
    Brian Wood*

    Amnesty International
    March 16 2006

    Key challenges for monitoring and verification

    States have a legal obligation to comply strictly with arms embargoes
    imposed by the Security Council under the authority of Chapter VII of
    the United Nations Charter. Rigorous design, monitoring and compliance
    with the agreed terms of such embargoes can contribute significantly to
    the promotion of international peace and security, and to the respect
    of a wide range of human rights and fundamental freedoms as required
    in international law. The authority of the Security Council and the
    United Nations is greatly undermined by persistent violations of UN
    embargoes and impunity of the violators.

    Verification arrangements for UN arms embargoes must therefore be
    capable of providing, in a timely fashion, clear and convincing
    evidence of compliance or non-compliance. Continued confirmation of
    compliance is an essential ingredient to building and maintaining
    confidence among the parties. However, it is clear that some
    fundamental elements of the international mechanisms for accurate
    and timely verification are missing or not adequately functioning.

    *Brian Wood is the manager of research and policy on arms control at
    the International Secretariat of Amnesty International in London. He
    has been researching and writing for Amnesty International on the
    control of conventional arms, especially small arms and light weapons,
    and security equipment and services since 1991.

    It has become more common practice for the Security Council to impose
    arms embargoes on parties (State and non-State) to a conflict as a
    response to the existence or impending threat of violent conflict.(1)

    There are currently mandatory territorial arms embargoes in force
    against the Ivory Coast(2), Liberia(3) and Somalia(4). Non-State
    actors are also subject to arms embargoes. Currently, every State
    in the international community is prohibited from transferring arms
    to groups in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC),(5) Liberia,(6)
    Rwanda,(7) Sierra Leone(8) and in Sudan,(9) as well as to Al-Qaida
    and associated persons.(10)

    Verification of illicit traffic in arms in violation of UN Security
    Council arms embargoes thus deserves substantive consideration. It
    should take into account the inherently clandestine nature of such
    traffic and its grave consequences. In particular, the proliferation
    and misuse of small arms and light weapons in conflicts and persistent
    acts of state repression involving serious human rights violations,
    war crimes and crimes against humanity pose major challenges for such
    verification for reasons that are set out below.

    Lack of UN standards to help ensure reliable state monitoring

    1. All UN arms embargoes should be mandatory on Member States - the
    notion of a non-mandatory embargo is a recipe to allow embargoed
    entities to make arrangements to flout the will of the United
    Nations.(11) Under Article 41 of the UN Charter, States have a legal
    obligation to abide by embargoes enacted by the Security Council and
    a duty to implement measures to ensure that persons within their
    jurisdiction also comply with the embargoes.(12) However, it is
    reported that many States have not made the violation of a UN arms
    embargo a criminal offence under their domestic law.

    2. Moreover, the challenges of verifying embargo compliance are
    compounded when States, especially traditional suppliers and adjacent
    States, do not have an adequate system of national laws and/or
    regulations and administrative procedures to exercise effective
    control over armaments and the export and import of arms in order
    to prevent illicit arms trafficking. This is particularly important
    because the UN Sanctions Committees themselves have no operational
    verification mechanisms. They have to rely on the efforts of individual
    Member States, acting singly or with others. Such cooperation can
    take several forms: unilateral, multilateral or the utilization of
    regional organizations - and it is reliant on political good will
    and commitment to upholding international norms.

    The scope and effectiveness of such national laws and regulations is
    an indicator of such commitment and these should be broad enough to
    cover all types of arms, especially small arms which often circulate
    in civil society and are easy to conceal, and to control all actors
    involved in arms production, assembly, stockpiles, transfers,
    brokering, financing and use. Unfortunately, this is far from the
    case and national controls, even in States with great resources.(13)

    3. The design of effective legal and regulatory standards and systems
    to prevent the wider illegal traffic in arms is essential to prevent
    the violation of UN arms embargoes. The wider problem of illegal arms
    trafficking is closely related to the illegal possession, transfer and
    misuse of arms by non-State actors, especially criminal groups, and
    often fuelled by the misuse of arms by state actors. Arms embargoes are
    imposed in order to address threats to peace and worsening humanitarian
    crises that in many cases are already being fuelled by such illegal
    acts. Embargoes are therefore late and often blunt instruments and
    therefore cannot be deployed effectively as an instrument by the
    United Nations to prevent illicit arms trafficking without better
    national controls.

    4. Monitoring and compliance with UN arms embargoes would greatly
    improve if national arms control systems were more consistent with
    existing international law. States would develop greater trust
    in supplying information to the UN about diverted arms if they
    had more common rules based on shared values. According to the UN
    Disarmament Commission Guidelines on International Arms Transfers of
    1996, "Limitations on arms transfers can be found in international
    treaties, binding decisions adopted by the Security Council under
    Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations and the principles
    and purposes of the Charter."[paragraph 8] Moreover "Illicit arms
    trafficking is understood to cover that international trade in
    conventional arms, which is contrary to the laws of States and/or
    international law." [paragraph 7](14) However, the General Assembly
    has not yet agreed on a set of explicit standards that provide clear
    and fair criteria for decisions on the international transfer of
    conventional arms. Such standards should at least reflect existing
    international obligations of States as agreed in paragraphs 8 and 9
    of the Guidelines, and provide for the right of self-defence as well
    as limit the freedom of States to authorise the transfer of weapons
    and munitions, including:

    - Rules of State responsibility prohibiting States from aiding
    and assisting other States in the commission of an internationally
    wrongful act, rules which are now codified in the International Law
    Commission's Articles on State Responsibility.(15)

    - Rules of international criminal law prohibiting persons from
    aiding and abetting in the commission of an international crime. The
    "aiding and abetting" provision of the International Criminal Court
    Statute establishes criminal responsibility if a person aids, abets
    or otherwise assists in the commission or the attempted commission
    of a crime, including by providing the means for its commission.(16)
    - Positive obligations of States to ensure respect for international
    humanitarian law and to cooperate in the protection and fulfilment of
    human rights beyond their borders. For example, the imposition of arms
    embargoes is another way in which the international community seeks to
    prevent breaches of the peace while also giving effect to its common
    Article 1 obligation under the Geneva Conventions, Article 1 of the
    UN Charter and the International Covenants on human rights.(17)

    In this regard, many of the guidelines for international transfers
    of conventional arms agreed by the Disarmament Commission in 1996
    are abstract and do not provide Member States with specific common
    criteria to ensure respect for existing agreed international norms.

    These guidelines have since been surpassed in providing such
    specificity by many regional agreements on international arms
    transfers and, given the gravity of the problem, are in need of urgent
    review. The 2001 UN Programme of Action on Small Arms and Light Weapons
    (UN PoA)(18) also acknowledges that there is an established body of
    international legal rules that will be relevant to the assessment of
    applications for export authorizations covering small arms and light
    weapons.(19) A growing number of States have expressed their support
    for elaborating common criteria based on such rules.(20)

    5. Greater openness by States can contribute significantly to
    verification of compliance with UN arms embargoes. However, the
    provision of objective public information on military matters and
    arms transfers is often not made to the maximum degree possible
    consistent with national security needs. This can seriously hamper
    UN investigations of illicit trafficking because it is harder to
    assess arms movements. Some States do not even report all their
    relevant transactions in their annual reports to the UN Register of
    Conventional Arms and do not report reliable customs data to the
    UN statistical services. The agreement in June 2005 to adopt a UN
    non-legal instrument on the marking and tracing of small arms and light
    weapons is a step forward, but currently this proposed instrument
    excludes ammunition and explosives and has an opt out clause for
    States to deny information. The vast majority of States favored a
    legally binding instrument, but a few States thwarted their efforts
    in the negotiations. These shortcomings should be addressed if ongoing
    UN investigations of arms embargo violations are to be improved.

    6. Another example of the absence of rigorous common standards for
    effective national laws that undermines the ability of the United
    Nations to ensure compliance with its arms embargoes is the problem
    of import licenses or verifiable end-use/end-user certificates for
    international arms transfers. All too often, UN investigations show
    how such documents are fake, forged or tampered with and issued
    by unauthorized persons. The Organization should agree on common
    standards for such documents and for verifying their authenticity,
    as requested in June 2005 by a number of States during the UN Biennial
    Meeting of States on small arms and light weapons. In November 2004,
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe agreed
    on standard elements for end use certificates and verification
    procedures. These offer a step forward, but could be strengthened
    by requiring the specific inclusion of data on whether any brokers
    or transport agents were to be used for the arms delivery, and also
    for delivery verification procedures. One practical measure is that
    the Secretariat could be tasked to maintain a central database of
    government officials authorized to sign end-user certificates and to
    assist UN investigative panels.

    7. A key problem for verification of compliance with UN arms
    embargoes is the lack of stringent national controls on the
    activities of arms brokers and transport agents who are frequently
    found to engage in unauthorized diversion of arms.(21) In 1996 the
    Disarmament Commission agreed that: "States should maintain strict
    regulations on the activities of private international arms dealers
    and cooperate to prevent such dealers from engaging in illicit arms
    trafficking."(22) Five years later, in 2001, a UN Group of Experts
    reported to the General Assembly on the feasibility of regulating
    arms manufacturers and dealers, including brokers and transporters,
    to prevent the illicit trafficking of small arms and light weapons.

    The delay in addressing this problem can be measured by the fact that
    in 1995, it had been shown how such dealers, brokers and transporters
    had supplied arms to those who perpetrated the Rwanda genocide in
    1994, as well to such actors who violated UN arms embargoes in Angola,
    the DRC, Liberia, Sierra Leone and other countries. In 2004, after
    some consultations with States and interested groups, the General
    Assembly decided to set up another Group of Government Experts after
    mid-2006 to examine how to prevent the illegal brokering of small arms
    and light weapons.(23) Despite a relatively high level of consensus
    by States as to the main forms of control, as reflected in a number
    of regional and multilateral agreements, the latest timetable means
    that any concerted action by States could take until 2008 or perhaps
    2010 - fifteen years after the original expression of concern in the
    Disarmament Commission. The Security Council and General Assembly
    should be more proactive in addressing this problem by devoting more
    urgent time and resources to the development of necessary standards.

    8. Often UN investigative problems are compounded by lack of skilled
    capacity on the part of State regulators and law enforcement agencies,
    for example too few customs officials are adequately trained to
    enforce the necessary regulations over the export and import of arms
    and to collect reliable data from ports. The Organization should be
    more proactive in encouraging bilateral and multilateral technical
    assistance programs to build such national capacity in accordance with
    high international standards. This is vital because the United Nations
    must rely upon Member States to monitor and enforce the implementation
    of embargoes in various ways such as through surveillance, data
    collection, inspections, and the investigation of allegations of
    violations.

    9. A related challenge for effective verification is whether States
    make sufficient efforts to prevent corruption and bribery in connection
    with the transfer of arms. One measure is the extent to which States
    implement relevant recommendations of Interpol; another is whether
    States actively cooperate at the bilateral and multilateral levels as
    appropriate to share relevant customs information on trafficking in
    and detection of illicit arms and coordinate intelligence efforts. The
    United Nations could do more to encourage States to identify, apprehend
    and bring to justice all those involved in illicit arms trafficking.

    Design and functioning of UN embargo verification mechanisms

    10. All measures of verification depend first and foremost upon the
    specific mandate given by the appropriate authority. In the past,
    the purpose of UN embargoes was to modify the behaviour of, but
    not to punish or exact retribution from, the country or party under
    sanctions; to minimize the impact of conflict on vulnerable groups
    and neighbouring or other States. In 1991, the UN Sanctions Committee
    on the former Yugoslavia, was given a mandate that included the
    power to recommend measures in response to violations and to approve
    exceptions to the embargo. The UN Committees established since then
    (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Somalia, Haiti, UNITA in Angola, and Rwanda)
    have had similar mandates. More recently, UN embargoes such as those
    on Liberia, the DRC and Sudan have included measures to enable the
    freezing of assets and travel bans for individuals and entities proven
    to have violated the embargoes.

    Sanctions Committees may be asked to (a) develop and improve
    guidelines for the implementation of measures imposed; b) collect
    and examine information submitted by States on actions they have
    taken for implementation with a view to making recommendations to
    the Council; (c) examine the Secretary-General's progress reports on
    implementation and to make appropriate recommendations to the Council;
    (d) deal with violations through consideration of information brought
    to their attention by States concerning violations, making periodic
    reports of violations to the Council (identifying where possible
    persons or entities, including vessels, reported to be engaged in
    the violations) and recommending appropriate measures in response;
    (e) approve of exceptions on application by States to the measures
    imposed by the Security Council, for example, on grounds of significant
    humanitarian need.

    Greater thought needs to be given to the grounding and impounding
    of aircraft and other vessels that are repeatedly used to violate
    arms embargoes, as well as to the prosecution of well-known arms
    embargo violators, and also to the use of "flags of convenience" by
    transport companies. As is the case with Interpol, the World Customs
    Union and the International Criminal Court prosecutor's office,
    the United Nations should seek the advice and active cooperation of
    the International Civil Aviation Organization and the International
    Maritime Organization on these and similar matters.

    11. In accordance with the UN principles for verification, arms
    embargo agreements should provide for procedures and mechanisms
    for investigation, review and evaluation. Realistic resources and
    time-frames for such investigations and reviews should be agreed
    in order to evaluate compliance. Panels of Experts with sufficient
    skills and capacity should be created whenever an arms embargo and
    corresponding Sanctions Committee are established by the Security
    Council and not, as sometimes happens, months later(24) or not at
    all when the humanitarian and security situation on the ground in the
    target country or countries has worsened. The process of setting up
    a panel should begin in the same Security Council resolution as that
    which imposes an embargo.

    12. To be adequate and effective, a verification regime for an
    arms embargo agreement must cover all relevant weapons, facilities,
    locations, installations and activities. In practice, this is very
    difficult and the UN Sanctions Committee and investigative team
    leaders must decide what is most relevant within the limited time
    and resources available. Increasingly, investigations of alleged
    violations of arms embargoes are also carried out by UN field
    staff as a form of fact-finding, using liaison officers to maintain
    contact with armed forces and groups and develop relationships to
    build trust and benefit from improved data collection and freedom of
    movement for patrols. The monitoring of ports and border crossings
    requires an understanding of customs laws and procedures. This has
    been carried out in some cases by UN personnel and in others, under
    a UN mandate, by regional organizations or multinational coalitions
    that possessed the necessary resources to verify the presence, or
    absence, of compliance. Verification methods ranging from mobile
    patrols and checkpoints along frontiers and monitors at airports
    and seaports to intercepts at sea, the use of maritime and aerial
    assets, including satellite surveillance, provided from national,
    multilateral and regional resources, has contributed to more effective
    implementation of the embargoes. In some instances, such as in Angola
    and the DRC, the United Nations has lacked sufficient resources to
    cover all airports and landing strips frequently enough. Enhanced
    telecommunications and air surveillance could improve the effectiveness
    of such monitoring. It is therefore vital that relevant structures
    in the United Nations establish coordination procedures and training
    for the close linkage between peacekeeping and security operations
    and traditional arms control and disarmament verification procedures.

    13. The skill and time required for UN panels of experts to carry out
    competent investigations needs to be reflected in UN institutional
    arrangements. The Security Council should establish such panels for
    extensive periods, preferably for at least a year, to allow them to
    conduct in-depth, non-discriminatory and comprehensive investigations
    both in the field and in those places suspected of being the sources
    and routes of illegal arms deliveries. An investigation of a single
    illicit deal might have to be conducted in several countries in
    different world regions because of the way trafficking networks
    operate. Too often panels have been given such short time periods and
    have too few personnel that they do not carry out what could become
    important investigations. The range of skills required should also
    be assessed carefully before panels are appointed. The trend towards
    appointing a range of specialists familiar with investigating the
    arms trade, transportation, customs and finance to panels appears to
    be valuable, as is the use of experienced research consultants, and
    there needs to be a good mix of language skills, computer literacy,
    impartial legal knowledge and management and negotiating skills
    appropriate for the tasks. However, these skills could be wasted and a
    panel's work undermined if any persons appointed put their allegiance
    or hostility to the interests of their home state or any other state
    above that of the United Nations. Recruitment and selection criteria
    should be designed to assess this difficulty.

    14. The Secretariat has developed databases on illicit arms trafficking
    and the violation of UN embargoes to support the work of the Sanctions
    Committees and the panels of experts. This should be reviewed and
    developed further so that the Organization does not waste valuable
    time and resources reconstructing files to investigate possible
    violators each time a panel is appointed. Experience has shown that
    some of the arms dealers, brokers and transporters named in UN reports
    for definite and probable violations of its arms embargoes are also
    named in other reliable reports or strongly suspected of violations
    on other countries. It would be worthwhile considering the purchase
    of certain reliable data or subscribing to key databases collected
    by impartial sources so that panels are not dependent on soliciting
    voluntary ad hoc contributions.

    15. It should be recalled that in 1987, the UN Disarmament Commission
    received a number of proposals to improve systems of verification to
    achieve compliance with arms limitation and disarmament agreements,
    for instance: (a) the establishment of a verification database
    within the United Nations; (b) the development of a UN capacity to
    provide advice to negotiators respecting verification matters; (c)
    research into the process, structures, procedures and techniques
    of verification as well as the role of the United Nations,
    beginning with a request to the Secretary-General to look into
    these and other matters with the assistance of qualified experts;
    (d) on a responsive basis, and with the consent of the parties
    to an arms limitation and disarmament negotiation or agreement,
    potential involvement by the Organization in the formulation and
    implementation of verification provisions of specific agreements;
    (e) the establishment of an integrated multilateral verification
    system within the United Nations; and (f) the setting up, under the
    UN aegis, of a mechanism for extensive international verification
    of compliance with agreements on reducing international tension
    and limiting armaments and on the military situation in conflict
    areas. These proposals should be further considered in the light of
    current circumstances and their implementation reviewed in order to
    improve systems of monitoring compliance with UN arms embargoes. For
    example, in post-conflict situations, regional arrangements may be
    made by affected States to verify limitations of arms imports into
    their border areas, and it would be useful for the United Nations to
    be involved in developing model procedures for such purposes.

    Methods, Procedures and Techniques

    16. The principle that verification arrangements should be implemented
    without discrimination can in practice be difficult when there is a
    shortage of resources and time to consider all views. On the one hand,
    UN investigative teams need to allocate time and resources to act with
    strict impartiality according to their mandate, and, on the other hand,
    State officials whom they approach for help should be cooperative,
    honest and as open as possible. Requests by UN investigative teams for
    inspections or information in accordance with the provisions of an arms
    embargo agreement should be as systematic and unbiased as possible,
    and States should consider such requests as a normal component of the
    verification process. If a panel is seen to be not pursuing a possible
    violation case and is then accused of political bias, it needs to be
    in a position to provide an unbiased answer. Otherwise its credibility
    will be undermined. If a government repeatedly refuses to cooperate
    with a UN investigative team without a legitimate reason, the Security
    Council should impose secondary sanctions on that government.

    17. Recent panel reports have been more explicit about the
    methodology and rules of evidence to be used in establishing a
    violation. The distinction between a possible violation, a probable
    violation and a definite violation has been more clearly explained
    in reports. While rules to ensure only the use of credible evidence
    have been established, there have still been disputes among officials
    regarding the nature of evidence and it would be wise to review this
    aspect of the work of panels.

    18. Improved mechanisms of communication and exchange should be
    created between UN investigative teams and the UN Sanctions Committee,
    and competent, independent and impartial bodies within civil society
    and individuals who have concrete information on possible embargo
    violations. Requirements of accuracy, discretion, confidentiality and
    witness protection need to be considered. Member States should be made
    aware that any attempts by their officials to impede such cooperation
    or punish civil society groups or individuals for providing what
    they deem to be reliable information will be reported to the Security
    Council and invoke counter action.

    19. Where UN peacekeeping forces are deployed in a conflict zone
    in which the embargoed entity operates, skilled members of that
    UN force should be assigned to protect, inspect and record serial
    numbers and markings of weapons and the markings of all ammunition
    and explosives that are found in the possession of, and seized or
    collected from, any person in the embargoed entity. It is distressing
    to find that, even sometimes nowadays, UN peacekeeping officials
    involved in demobilization, disarmament and re-integration programs
    have diligently recorded the serial numbers of weapons retrieved but
    have not recorded the corresponding markings, rendering the lists
    of serial numbers almost useless. Other times ammunition has been
    destroyed before markings are photographed and recorded. It is vital
    that reliable records and other observations and reliable reports
    on illicit traffic should be communicated without delay to the UN
    authorities and to the relevant UN investigative teams for analysis.

    20. Stocks of seized illegal weapons and munitions should be safely
    destroyed during UN peace processes and embargo enforcement operations,
    and this can often be publicized to create public confidence. However,
    such destruction should only be carried out after digital photographic
    records have been taken of serial numbers and markings of all items
    to allow for tracing by the relevant authorities in the United Nations
    and Member States.

    21. As a necessary precaution, serial numbers and markings of weapons
    and markings on ammunition and explosives that are transferred into
    a conflict zone to an authorized entity, but where one or more of the
    embargoed entities also operates, should routinely be recorded by each
    Member State exporting, importing and transiting such items. The UN
    peacekeeping monitors and UN investigative teams should be allowed to
    conduct spot checks of those records and inventories. All too often,
    there is an absence of such records and inventories are kept hidden
    from UN investigators in circumstances where confidential access
    would pose little or no risk to national security.

    22. The analysis of results and review of reported findings
    can sometimes involve strong differences of interpretation and
    opinion amongst panelists, members of the Sanctions Committee and
    UN Secretariat staff. It is vital that these differences are fully
    discussed in an impartial manner so that the Sanctions Committee
    can reach reasonable editorial solutions before UN investigative
    reports are released publicly. Every effort should be made by the
    Organization and Member States not to self-censor important facts and
    prevent uncomfortable facts being published as this merely encourages
    speculation and misunderstanding of the situation in the affected
    countries and undermines confidence in UN verification mechanisms.

    23. Donor countries should be encouraged to provide financial
    and appropriate material resources to ensure that the above needs
    are met. The costs of effective verification activities to ensure
    compliance with UN arms embargoes are small in relation to the savings
    - in public expenditure, development aid and most importantly human
    lives - that would be achieved if every embargo were fully respected.

    It is doubtful that this list is exhaustive, but hopefully it will
    assist discussion in the United Nations to improve the verification of
    violations of its arms embargoes, and compliance with such embargoes.

    ********

    (1) Embargoes are also imposed by regional organizations,
    most notably by the European Union (EU) and the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). In April 2004,
    there were EU arms embargoes against eleven States: Afghanistan,
    Bosnia-Herzegovina, Burma (Myanmar), China, Democratic Republic of
    Congo, Iraq, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan and Zimbabwe. In
    1993, the OSCE imposed a politically binding embargo on Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, aimed at "all deliveries of weapons and munitions to
    forces engaged in combat in the Nagorno-Karabakh area" (Decisions
    Based on the Interim Report on Nagorno-Karabakh, available online:
    http://projects.sipri.se/expcon/csceazbarm .htm). An important
    expression of political will, such embargoes do not carry the weight of
    their UN counterpart if only because they are, by their very nature,
    regional in scope and can be thus undermined by countries outside
    the arrangement that may not subscribe to the same political view.

    (2) S/RES/1572, 15 November 2004 (for a period of 12 months);
    S/RES/1584, 1 February 2005 (reaffirming the embargo).

    (3) S/RES/1521, 22 December 2003 (for a period of 12 months);
    S/RES/1579, 21 December 2004 (renewed for a period of 12 months).

    (4) S/RES/733, 23 January 1992; most recently reaffirmed in S/RES/1519,
    15 December 2003 and S/RES/1558, 17 August 2004.

    (5) S/RES/1493, 28 July 2003, targeting "all foreign and Congolese
    armed groups and militias operating in the territory of North and
    South Kivu and of Ituri, and to groups not party to the Global
    and All-inclusive agreement, in the Democratic Republic of Congo"
    (for a period of 12 months); S/RES/1552, 27 July 2004 (renewed for
    a period of 12 months).

    (6) S/RES/1521, 22 December 2003, targeting the LURD and the Movement
    for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL), as well as "all former and current
    militias and armed groups" (for a period of 12 months); S/RES/1579,
    21 December 2004 (renewed for a period of 12 months).

    (7) S/RES/1011, 16 August 1995, targeting "non-governmental forces"
    inside Rwanda and persons in neighbouring States that intend to use
    arms and related materiel in Rwanda.

    (8) S/RES/1171, 5 June 1998, targeting "non-governmental forces in
    Sierra Leone".

    (9) S/RES/1556, 30 July 2004, targeting "all non-governmental entities
    and individuals, including the Janjaweed, operating in the States of
    North Darfur, South Darfur and West Darfur".

    (10) S/RES/1390, 28 January 2002 (for a period of 12 months);
    S/RES/1455, 17 January 2003 (decision to improve the implementation
    of the measures over a further period of 12 months); S/RES/1526, 30
    January 2004 (decision to improve the implementation of the measures
    over a further period of 18 months).

    (11) In a recent resolution on the situation in Burundi, the Security
    Council expressed "its deep concern over the illicit flow of arms
    provided to armed groups and movements, in particular those which
    are not parties to the peace process under the Arusha Agreement" and
    called upon "all States to halt such flow" (S/RES/1545, 21 May 2004,
    para. 18).

    (12) Article 41 confers upon the Security Council the power to call for
    a "complete or partial interruption of economic relations [...] and the
    severance of diplomatic relations" in response to a threat to or breach
    of the peace or an act of aggression. It is within the discretion of
    each State to decide the type of responsibility (administrative offence
    v. criminal offence) that attaches to a violation of the embargo by a
    private actor. In a resolution on the situation in Africa adopted in
    1998, the Security Council encouraged Member States to adopt measures
    making the violation of mandatory arms embargoes a criminal offence
    (see S/RES/1196, 16 September 1998, para. 2).

    (13) See for example, Amnesty International, "Undermining Global
    Security: EU arms exports", October 2004, and Control Arms Campaign,
    "Arms exports from the G8", June 2005.

    (14) Guidelines for international arms transfers in the context
    of General Assembly resolution 46/36 H of 6 December 1991', UN
    Disarmament Commission, May 1996, Official Records of the General
    Assembly, Fifty-first Session, Supplement No. 42 (A/51/42), 22 May 1996

    (15) Articles 16 and 41(2). The Articles were commended by the General
    Assembly and annexed to resolution 56/83, Responsibility of States for
    Internationally Wrongful Acts, UN Doc. A/RES/56/83, 12 December 2001.

    (16) Rome Statute, Article 25(3)(c) [emphasis added].

    (17) The Question of the Trade, Carrying and Use of Small Arms
    and Light Weapons in the Context of Human Rights and Humanitarian
    Norms, Working paper submitted by Barbara Frey in accordance with
    Sub-Commission decision 2001/120, Economic and Social Council, UN
    Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/2002/39, 30 May 2002.; also Prevention of human
    rights violations committed with small arms and light weapons,
    Preliminary report submitted by Barbara Frey, Special Rapporteur,
    in accordance with Sub-Commission decision 2002/25, Economic and
    Social Council, UN Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/2003/29, 25 June 2003.

    (18) "Programme of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit
    Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All of Its Aspects", in
    Report of the United Nations Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small
    Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects, New York, 9-20 July 2001,
    UN Doc. A/CONF.192/15.

    (19) UN PoA, section 2, Article 11.

    (20) Around 50 States have expressed support for the idea of an
    International Arms Trade Treaty based upon international norms, and
    many more States have called for international binding instruments
    for arms transfers.

    (21) Brian Wood and Johan Peleman, in a 1999 study entitled The Arms
    Fixers, ( available from www.nisat.org) enumerated many loopholes
    in existing national controls: the lack of specific provisions to
    regulate the brokering and transportation of arms; lax control on
    weapons stocks; acting as an agent between supplier and buyer without
    the weapons entering the territory; using barter arrangements and
    offshore financing especially in tax havens; easily circumvented
    documentation requirements; using circuitous routes to conceal the
    true nature of cargoes; exploiting difficulties in enforcing customs
    controls, particularly in countries with long borders and limited
    resources. See also: Small Arms Survey 2004: Rights at Risk, Oxford,
    Oxford University Press, 2004, pp.143-146

    (22) UN Guidelines on International Arms Transfers, op cit.

    (23) Resolution 59/86, 10 December 2004.

    (24) As happened with the embargoes imposed on Rwanda, the Democratic
    Republic of the Congo, and Sudan, op cit.

    http://www.amnestyusa.org/news/document.do?i d=ENGIOR400052006
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