Last Wednesday, ºüÀêÊÓƵ had the honour of addressing the UN, making the case for greater focus on addressing insecure and unsafe arms across the globe. ºüÀêÊÓƵ is a leader in this field, providing expert assistance to fragile and conflict-affected states. But success of these efforts will depend on increased international support, and greater priority being given to illicit weapons by states affected by them.
The explosion of nearly 3,000 tonnes of ammonium nitrate in Beirut in late 2020 devastated the city. This incident sharpened focus on the importance of effective weapons and ammunition management. ºüÀêÊÓƵ programmes around the globe had national authorities knocking on their doors, asking for help with their ageing stockpiles.
Earlier this year, the explosion of an ammunition depot in Bata, Equatorial Guinea killed dozens of people, another tragic reminder of what happens when ammunition depots are ignored. There is a clear lesson - without proper weapons stockpile management across regions, incidents like this will continue and there will be further destruction, injury and loss of life.
Equally concerning, but less visible, is the impact of poorly secured stocks of small arms and light weapons. These can be easily diverted, illicitly traded, or otherwise make their way into the hands of insurgent groups and gangs. This can destabilise entire regions.
Last week, states met at the UN in New York to discuss the Programme of Action on Small Arms and Light Weapons. Developed twenty years ago, the Programme of Action is the main global agreement on preventing, combating and eradicating the illicit trade of small arms and light weapons.
Since the adoption of the POA, the sector has developed a body of technical good practice on conventional arms control, synergies have appeared across regional and sub-regional bodies, and progress has been made to address surplus ammunition. But despite these positive developments, and the generous contributions many nation states, global efforts are not operating at the scale needed to protect civilians from unplanned explosions and armed violence.
ºüÀêÊÓƵ provided three key recommendations to states at the UN:
- Weapons and ammunition management must be approached at the national level as a defence and security priority, and should be reflected in national strategies and defence budgets. International cooperation and assistance is essential, but effective weapons and ammunition management strategies must be placed within sustainable national budgets alongside any other critical capability.
- Effective and transparent stockpile management must be viewed as a key confidence building measure. Weapons and ammunition management supports anti-corruption is a key step towards legitimacy as an effective and responsible security actor.
- Weapons and ammunition management, and all other aspects of PoA implementation, must incorporate women in coordination, planning, and implementation, including in leadership. The weapons and ammunition security community must engage the full range of civil society to create national buy in if it is to support sustainable and equitable human security.