UN Crime Congress Pledges Closer Co-operation Against Global Threats New York,
Apr 25 2005
Greatly concerned by the rapid expansion of transnational organized crime, delegates at a United Nations forum on
criminal justice have pledged closer international cooperation to tackle global economic and financial graft, as well as
increasingly sophisticated criminal networks and terrorists.
The "http://www.11uncongress.org/main/main1.htm"Eleventh UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice wrapped its eight-day " http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2005/soccp336.doc.htm "session today in Bangkok, Thailand, unanimously adopting the "Bangkok Declaration." In that text, they vowed to
increase cooperation in information sharing, extradition, mutual legal assistance and other areas, especially related to
money laundering, drug trafficking, human trafficking, "cybercrime" and the financing of international terrorism.
According to the Declaration, delegations reaffirmed their readiness to seek to improve international cooperation in the
fight against crime and terrorism at the multilateral, regional and bilateral levels, especially in the prevention,
investigation, prosecution and adjudication of transnational organized crime and terrorism and in discovering any
existing links between them.
The Congress also called on all States that had not yet done so to ratify and implement the provisions of the UN
Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and its three Protocols, and the UN Convention against Corruption. It
further called upon donors and financial institutions to continue to make adequate voluntary contributions for technical
assistance to developing countries and countries with economies in transition in order to help them build capacity to
prevent and tackle crime.
The meeting also ushered in the entry into force of the Firearms Protocol to the organized crime treaty, as Zambia
became the 40th nation to ratify it. The Protocol is considered a critical component of the UN's anti-crime efforts and
provides an opportunity and an obligation for countries to control small arms, which kill an estimated half million
people every year.
"Small arms traffickers have littered the world with the victims of their trade," said Antonia Maria Costa, Executive
Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime "http://www.unodc.org/unodc/index.html". "[But] along with the 39 other
States that have ratified this protocol, Zambia is sending a powerful message to criminal gangs and gunrunners around he
world – 'Your time is up.'"
ENDS