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Make
the temporary victory more permanent
Desmond Tutu, Mail & Guardian (SA)
May 21, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=339563&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/
In the current
scandal of the attempt
to ship tons of arms and ammunition to Zimbabwe it is the Chinese
who have spoken the most sense. China-s foreign ministry said
the country-s shipment of mortar grenades, rockets and bullets
was "perfectly normal trade"
It certainly is. Shipping
arms to African governments who could use them to abuse their own
people is an abhorrent but almost daily occurrence. And at present
there is nothing the international community can do about it because
there are no effective global controls.
If you want to export
weapons to a country that commits gross human rights abuses, you
can. You might have to use a few tricks to get around the flimsy
patchwork of controls that exists, but it is easy and it is done
all the time.
The case of the An Yue
Jiang and its cargo is different because it happened at a politically
fraught time, for both Zimbabwe and China, and because the world
heard about it.
Originally only
vigilance of the South African transport
workers- union stopped the shipment being unloaded in
Durban. This is a systematic failure, but entirely predictable because
of the lack of transparency in shipping arms. The dockworkers alerted
the world to the danger the An Yue Jiang and its contents posed.
Then there was the sight of the international community scrabbling
around trying to prevent the ship from docking and the weapons reaching
Zimbabwe.
The United States in
particular worked hard to stop the shipment, but it had to resort
only to diplomatic pressure. Despite a record of human rights abuses,
Zimbabwe is not current under a United Nations (UN) arms embargo.
This would be a welcome first step. But there are ways round embargos.
At the moment the UN
is working on an Arms Trade Treaty that could stop weapons transfer.
If a strong treaty eventually becomes law then an arms exporter
will have to block the sale if there is evidence the weapons are
likely to be used to commit serious violations of human rights law.
If they went ahead with the sale, then civil society in the exporting
country or other countries would be able to challenge this decision
- as they certainly would have done in this case.
Under an effective Arms
Trade Treaty human rights would not be the only criteria used to
assess a weapons sale. The effect on development would also be included,
According to research, armed conflicts costs Africa $18-billion
dollars a year in lost economic opportunities. On average a war,
civil war or insurgency shrinks an African economy by 15%. More
than 95% of Kalashnikov rifles come from outside the continent.
So do the bullets, mortar and other ammunition upon which warring
armies depend. A strong treaty should include ammunition as well
as weapons themselves.
Of course legitimate
uses such as defence or policing would not be affected by an Arms
Trade Treaty. Governments who treat their people well have nothing
to fear and neither will legitimate arms producers.
There is support from
many arms manufacturers for a treaty: they want their business recognized
as legitimate and the crooks banned from operating.
In December 2006 more
than 150 countries voted at the UN to work towards a legally binding
arms Trade Treaty. This May the process continues as a group of
experts meets to advance it.
Now that it looks like
the ship and its contents are returning to China and civil society,
trade unions, human rights groups and others can proclaim a momentary
victory. But if the UN-s meeting do not come out in support
of a tough treaty, this victory will be at best temporary, at worst
meaningless.
*Emeritus
Archbishop Desmond Tutu is a former Nobel Peace Prize winner and
human rights activist
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