Brokers Without Borders: Pacific Arms Trade Report
Please see attached Oxfam's new report: 'Brokers without Borders'. Oxfam has produced this report in order to highlight the dangerous gaps that exist in the New Zealand, Pacific and global arms control systems that allow unscrupulous arms brokers to profit from the irresponsible arms trade.
Full report: Brokers_without_Borders_report_EMBARGOED_6.15am_NZT_Oct_19.pdf
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Oxfam Case Study 18 October 2010
Brokers Without Borders
How illicit arms brokers can slip through gaps in the Pacific and international arms control system
www.oxfam.org
On 11
December 2009 a 35 tonne cache of conventional weapons left
NorthKorea bound for Iran. The following day the arms were
intercepted andseized by authorities in Thailand. In an
unexpected twist it was soondiscovered that the plane
chartered to carry out this illegal transfer wasleased by a
New Zealand registered shell company. To date those
whoarranged the transfer have not been held
accountable.
The case demonstrates that the existing international arms control system isnot adequately combating illicit brokering. Illicit arms brokers continue touse global networks of companies and individuals to exploit regulatory gapsbetween jurisdictions to carry out their transactions with relative impunity.
An effective Arms Trade Treaty, supported by robust national legislation andregional cooperation, will provide solutions to closing these gaps andstopping the irresponsible trade in deadly weapons.
Executive summary
Since 2006,
more than 2,000 people each day have died as a result of
armed violence,1 and thousands more have had their human
rights violated and their livelihoods undermined by the
irresponsible trade and use of deadly weapons. The current
international arms control system is failing to adequately
regulate the arms trade and hold arms brokers and dealers
accountable for their actions. As a result weapons continue
to be transferred into environments where they are
undermining development and fuelling human rights
abuses.
Oxfam has produced this report to examine publically available information about one specific case of illicit arms brokering. Through an analysis of the case and the enabling factors that allowed this illicit transfer to occur, the report identifies key lessons about how states can work together at the domestic, regional and international level to find solutions for the problem of illicit brokering.
On 11 December 2009 a 35 tonne cache of conventional weapons left the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (‘North Korea’) bound for Iran, in violation of the UN arms embargo on North Korea. The following day the arms were intercepted in Bangkok by Thai authorities. In an unexpected twist it was soon discovered that the plane chartered to carry out this illegal transfer was leased by a New Zealand registered company, SP Trading. All of a sudden New Zealand, the country ranked as the world’s most peaceful nation in 2009,2 was linked to one of the biggest international arms trafficking cases that year.
Although the attempted transfer was undoubtedly illicit, to date only a single person linked to the case through the New Zealand registered SP Trading, has been charged.
However SP Trading was only one of as many as eight companies involved at various levels, with connections to at least ten different countries spanning Asia, the Pacific, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and the Caucasus.
These revelations have also demonstrated that while there is a perception that the Pacific has low exposure to arms trafficking, in reality the region is open to exploitation by illicit dealers. Illicit brokers have been able to manipulate gaps in New Zealand sanctions and company law frameworks to evade accountability.
Without further action to prosecute those criminally responsible, or legislative action to sufficiently tighten New Zealand’s relevant regulations, the New Zealand system will remain open to further abuse.
Oxfam and a range of other non-governmental organisations (NGOs) making up the Control Arms Campaign, have called for the creation of the first universal, legally binding Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) to address the inadequacies of the current international arms control system. An effective ATT could help tackle the problem of illicit brokering by imposing higher common international standards amongst states to hold companies and individuals in their jurisdictions accountable for their role in international arms transfers. This should include regulating their conduct and holding them liable where breaches of international law have occurred. Practically, a comprehensive ATT could provide the framework to resolve jurisdictional issues allowing illicit brokers to avoid prosecution and encourage greater cooperation between states to stamp out such activities. To close the gaps that allow illicit brokers to operate with few constraints, it is therefore critical that the scope of an ATT include effective controls on brokers and brokering transactions.
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Full report: Brokers_without_Borders_report_EMBARGOED_6.15am_NZT_Oct_19.pdf