The United Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly
approved the first U.N. treaty to regulate the estimated $60 billion global
arms trade on Tuesday.
The goal of the , which the U.N. has sought for over a
decade, according to , is to keep illicit weapons out of the hands of
terrorists, insurgent fighters and organized crime.
The vote on the treaty was 154-3, with 23 abstentions.
Iran, Syria and North Korea voted against the treaty,
the same three nations that blocked the treaty's adoption at a negotiating
conference last Thursday.
The 23 countries that abstained included a handful of
Latin American nations, as well as Russia, one of the largest arms exporters.
Russian envoy to the United Nations Vitaly I. Churkin said his country had
misgivings about what he called ambiguities in the treaty,including how terms
like genocide would be defined.
"The treaty would require states exporting
conventional weapons to develop criteria that would link exports to avoiding
human-rights abuses, terrorism and organized crime. It would also ban shipments
if they were deemed harmful to women and children. Countries that join the
treaty would have to report publicly on sales every year, exposing the process
to levels of transparency that rights groups hope will strictly limit illicit
weapons deals."
In the U.S., there from the National Rifle
Association. The gun lobby fears that the treaty would be used to regulate
civilian weapons, and the NRA has vowed to fight ratification in the Senate.
The treaty will not, in fact, control the domestic use
of arms in any country, but nations that ratify it will be required to create
and enforce national regulations to control the transfer of conventional arms,
parts and components and regulate arms brokers.
Battle tanks, armored combat vehicles, large-caliber
artillery systems, combat aircraft, attack helicopters, warships, missiles and
missile launchers, and small arms and light weapons are covered under the
treaty.
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