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Conference of States Parties to the Arms Trade Treaty

The Arms Trade Treaty was adopted by the UN General Assembly on 02 April 2013 and entered into force on 24 December 2014. As called for by Article 17 of the Treaty, a Conference of States Parties (CSP) was convened by the Provisional Secretariat one year after the Treaty entered into force.

The adoption of the Arms Trade Treaty was a historic victory. However, its humanitarian impact will depend on the effectiveness of its implementation. The CSP is an important part of this, since the annual forum is where States Parties, signatories, UN bodies and civil society meet to assess and discuss implementation progress.

First Conference of States Parties (CSP2015)

Cancun – 24-27 August 2015

Preparatory Meetings

The first Conference of States Parties (CSP) to the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) took place from 24-27 August 2015 in Cancun, Mexico. It followed five informal and formal preparatory meetings that took place over the previous 12 months, and represented a critical opportunity for States Parties to make decisions to guarantee that the ATT will be implemented robustly.

It was overall a successful meeting, with decisions made including the adoption of the Rules of Procedure; agreeing Financial Rules; agreeing the location, Head and remit of the ATT Secretariat, and agreeing the President, Vice-Presidents and Management Committee for CSP 2016.

Disappointingly, however, despite a considerable amount of work being done ahead of the CSP, States Parties could not agree on templates that they could use as the basis for either their initial or first annual reports that will be falling due starting from 24 December 2015 and on 31 May 2016 respectively. Additionally some debates and decisions highlighted political tensions and a North-South divide in approach and perspectives. Going forward, States must show greater ambition and courage if the ATT is to really make a difference and fulfill its potential.

Background info

Media and updates

Seventh Conference of States Parties (CSP202q)

CITY, COUNTRY - 00 - 00 Month 2021

Sierra Leone is presiding over the Seventh Conference of States Parties (CSP 2021) of the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT)

Background

Provisional Agenda LINKS

Provisional Annotated Program of Work LINKS

Final Report LINK

President's Announcement for CSP7 LINK

 

Press Release

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Statements on behalf of the Control Arms Coalition

Media

 

Photos

More photos from CSP 2021 can be found here.

Daily Summary Report

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Daily Video Summary

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Control Arms advocates for strong ATT implementation: Vienna https://controlarms.org/blog/control-arms-advocates-for-strong-att-implementation-vienna/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=control-arms-advocates-for-strong-att-implementation-vienna https://controlarms.org/blog/control-arms-advocates-for-strong-att-implementation-vienna/#respond Fri, 24 Apr 2015 16:13:43 +0000 http://controlarms.org/?p=4486 Preparations for the Arms Trade Treaty’s First Conference of States Parties (CSP) took another step forward with an international meeting in Vienna, Austria this week (20-21 April). The informal meeting was attended by over 300 representatives of government, international organizations, and civil society from 90 countries. NGOs gave presentations as part of two plenary panels […]

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Preparations for the Arms Trade Treaty’s First Conference of States Parties (CSP) took another step forward with an international meeting in Vienna, Austria this week (20-21 April). The informal meeting was attended by over 300 representatives of government, international organizations, and civil society from 90 countries. NGOs gave presentations as part of two plenary panels which focused on best practice in Treaty implementation, and which afforded an opportunity to emphasize the importance of effective ATT implementation, as well as the continued drive for universalization.

Rules of procedure, reporting, financing, and the permanent ATT Secretariat were also on the agenda of the two day meeting.

Control Arms Coalition representatives included 40 campaigners, policy experts, and advocates from all regions. Abjata Khalif, a journalist and grassroots activist from Kenya, who was one of the first on the scene after the massacre of students at Garissa University in northern Kenya in early April, gave the opening intervention on behalf of Control Arms. He urged diplomats from around the world to agree Rules of Procedure for Treaty implementation which would help to save lives.

“In Kenya, we say ‘147 is not just a number.’ Because each one murdered in Garissa was a young man or a young woman with hopes, dreams and aspirations. Just like your sons and daughters. But those hopes are over, and those bright young lives destroyed.

Where do these guns from, that kill our brothers and sisters? Our sons and daughters? Our mothers and fathers? They are not made in Africa. They come from overseas, and they are too easily getting into the wrong hands. Too easily purchased, and too easily diverted.

Effective implementation, which actually stop arms transfers that fuel poverty, human rights abuses and suffering. We need the highest possible international norm to be established, not the lowest common denominator.”

WATCH ABJATA’S FULL SPEECH HERE.

While some progress was made at the meeting, some governments insist on relying heavily on consensus-based decision making, and want decisions to be deferred where this is not achieved. This effort, risks placing the ATT on the long list of global bodies where delay, deferment, and inaction are all commonplace. Additional recommendations like requiring civil society to pay to attend Conferences of States Parties meetings and watered down reporting measures were also put forward, although by a small number of countries.

Representatives from Control Arms also met with Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz, and urged him to ensure Austria remains a progressive leader in the ATT process, and to use his leadership to push other European States in particular to support effective Treaty implementation. Control Arms wants to see Rules of Procedure which enable decisions to be taken swiftly and effectively, with no potential for any one country or small group of countries to veto; financial rules which are fair and do not disadvantage smaller economies, open and transparent meetings and comprehensive public reporting.

Click here to read Control Arms’ full analysis of the Vienna Informal PrepComm.

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