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Ban appeals for compromise at final UN arms talks
by Staff Writers
United Nations (AFP) March 18, 2013


China replaces UK in top five arms exporters: report
Beijing (AFP) March 18, 2013 - China has overtaken Britain to become the world's fifth largest arms exporter with five percent of the global trade, its highest position since the Cold War, a Swedish think tank said on Monday.

It is the first time Britain has not figured in the top five weapons suppliers since 1950, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said in a report.

China's arms exports in 2008-2012 grew by 162 percent compared to the previous five years, with 55 percent going to Pakistan "due to large outstanding and planned orders for combat aircraft, submarines and frigate".

"China's rise has been driven primarily by large-scale arms acquisitions by Pakistan," Paul Holtom, a research director at SIPRI said in a press release.

"A number of recent deals indicate that China is establishing itself as a significant arms supplier to a growing number of important recipient states."

Pakistan has long been China's key ally in South Asia. The report also named Myanmar, Bangladesh and Venezuela as importers of Chinese arms.

The global arms trade grew by 17 percent in 2008-2012 over the previous period, the report said, with the US and Russia still the main exporters, holding market shares of 30 percent and 26 percent respectively.

They were followed by Germany and France in the rankings.

European countries beset by economic troubles were attempting to re-sell recently acquired combat aircraft to cut costs, the report added, with Portugal and Spain looking for buyers for F-16 and Eurofighter aircraft respectively.

East Asian countries are seeking to boost their naval capabilities amid territorial disputes, the document said, adding that the top five importers of major conventional weapons worldwide were all Asian.

India was the world's biggest buyer, followed by China, Pakistan, South Korea and Singapore. Both India and China obtained most of their imports from Russia.

China has boosted its domestic weapons production since it faced bans on Western military imports following the crushing of the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989.

Beijing does not release arms export figures but foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said that it always takes "a responsible and prudent attitude towards international arms sales" and abides by UN Security Council resolutions.

"China has three principles on arms exports," he said at a regular briefing. "Firstly, they must relate to legitimate defence purposes. Secondly, they must not threaten regional and global stability. Thirdly, they must not interfere with countries' internal affairs."

UN leader Ban Ki-moon led international appeals Monday for the major powers to reach a compromise on a landmark conventional arms trade treaty as final negotiations started.

The 193 UN members have until March 28 to conclude an accord on the $80 billion a year trade in small arms, tanks, warships, combat aircraft, ammunition and missile launchers.

"The absence of the rule of law in the conventional arms trade defies explanation," Ban told the opening of the negotiating conference, highlighting that "there are common standards in the trade of arm chairs but not in arms."

Armed conflict kills more than 500,000 people a year and some Latin American drug cartels are now better armed than the national armies where they operate, the UN leader added.

"Now is the time for focus and political will to negotiate the final details of the treaty," Ban said.

The treaty would aim to force countries to evaluate, before making a sale, whether weapons will be used for human rights violations, terrorism or organized crime.

An attempt to finalize an Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) in July last year failed. A compromise document was drawn up, but the United States, followed by Russia and others, said they needed more time to study the accord.

Washington remains opposed to including ammunition in an accord. Other major arms producers such as Russia and China have also taken a tough stance, diplomats said.

"We do not know yet, at this stage, whether we will succeed," said Finland's Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja, whose country has been one of seven leading nations behind the conference.

At the opening of the talks, Tuomioja appealed to all states to "be prepared to make compromises and find the political will to agree on the arms trade treaty."

"The first red line must be to not weaken the treaty" drawn up last July, said France's chief negotiator, Jean-Hugues Simon-Michel, adding that doing so would amount to "reopening Pandora's Box."

The inclusion of ammunition remains a major obstacle to an accord.

Tuomioja said ammunition was "one of the core issues in the ATT and should be treated as such." He said the draft accord with ammunition relegated to an annex, and therefore essentially unmonitored, was "inadequate."

The US State Department reaffirmed Friday that it opposes any treaty that includes ammunition because of the financial and administrative burden of keeping checks.

The United States -- which is believed to account for half of the estimated $4 billion a year ammunition market -- is under pressure from the influential National Rifle Association and other groups to oppose an accord.

"The United States is steadfast in its commitment to achieve a strong and effective Arms Trade Treaty," said Secretary of State John Kerry.

But he added that his country, the world's top arms producer, could only agree on a "treaty that addresses international transfers of conventional arms solely."

Oxfam and Amnesty International have meanwhile condemned the absence of spare parts from the draft text. Oxfam estimates this market at $9.7 billion dollars between 2008 and 2011.

The text also does not cover transfers of arms carried out as part of military cooperation accords, such as Russia's military aid to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad.

The United States helps Egypt and France assists its African allies through similar accords.

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