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Human Rights Watch, Press Release
October 8, 2002
EU:
Keep Up Pressure for Arms Trade
Reforms in Candidate Countries
New York, October
8, 2002 - The European Union (EU) should continue to press
candidate countries in Central and Eastern Europe to improve
arms trade controls, Human Rights Watch said today.
Tomorrow, the EU is expected to release
the latest annual reports assessing the progress of individual candidates toward
accession. These will help pave the way for final decisions, expected later
this year, on the next round of EU enlargement.
Several candidate
countries in Central and Eastern Europe have a track record
of supplying arms to human rights abusers, areas of violent
conflict, and clients suspected of diverting weapons to unauthorized
destinations, and such practices have continued.
"In the past
year, some EU candidate countries have made strides in improving
controls on the arms trade," said Lisa Misol, researcher
with the Arms Division of Human Rights Watch. "But the
European Union must remain engaged, even after enlargement
decisions are made, to help secure improvements and address
remaining problems."
In a new briefing
paper released today, Human Rights Watch said that the prospect
of EU enlargement had helped motivate the tightening of arms
trade controls by Central and Eastern European countries. Human
Rights Watch stressed, however, that more work was needed to
ensure reliable control over the trade and adherence to basic
norms governing arms exports.
Drawing on recent
examples from Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Poland, Romania and
Slovakia, Human Rights Watch highlighted the following concerns:
· Authorized
arms transfers to destinations where the weapons risk fueling
human rights abuses and armed conflict,
· The absence of sufficient checks to prevent the diversion of weapons
to unauthorized destinations,
· The activities
of arms brokers and transport agents who disguise the true
destination of the weapons,
· The
need to strictly enforce arms embargoes and punish violators,
and
· The
sale of surplus weapons from government arsenals to trouble spots
around the globe.
Human Rights Watch
offered recommendations for how EU countries could help ensure
strict controls on the arms trade from Central and Eastern
Europe. It also called on Western European countries to live
up to minimum standards, as outlined in the 1998 EU Code of
Conduct on Arms Exports, to which
candidate countries have also adhered.
Human Rights Watch
said that, in addition to raising standards among candidate
countries, EU member states should exercise the utmost caution
in national arms trade decisions, in strict compliance with
the EU Code of Conduct.
"When it comes
to stopping irresponsible arms trading from Europe, the European
Union should lead the way by example," said Misol.
To read Human Rights
Watch’s briefing paper, please see:
http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/arms/eu_briefing.htm
Further information
on arms trading from Central and Eastern Europe is available
at: http://www.hrw.org/arms/cee.php
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