Sierra Leone’s President, Dr. Julius Maada Bio, has launched a vigorous effort to expand the membership of the Arms Trade Treaty, the key instrument for regulating the global arms trade. The ATT covers the production, movement and stockpiling of weapons, as well as human rights issues that are salient in armed conflict. Sierra Leone was elected President of the ATT in August last year, and has focused on the eradication of the illicit arms trade and diversion of conventional arms by establishing international standards governing arms transfers as the main theme of its one-year presidency.
The ATT already has 110 state parties, including four Permanent Members of the UN Security Council – United States, China, Britain and France. Currently, 28 African countries are state parties, including Ghana, Nigeria, Senega, South Africa and Namibia, and 12 African countries are signatories but are not yet state parties. Sierra Leone ratified the Arms Trade Treaty on 12 August 2014, as the 43rd UN Member State and 4th African country to do so.
In a letter addressed to other Heads of States that are not yet members of the ATT body, President Bio appealed to them to make an important contribution to ending the illicit trade of arms and realizing the full potential of the ATT by signing and ratifying the treaty.
Said President Bio in a note accompanying the letters, “In 2020, Sierra Leone had the singular honor to be elected President of the 7th Conference of States Parties to the Treaty. Our recent history of civil war and successful disarmament programme mean that we particularly value the work that we all do at the ATT. I believe we all share the same goal of preventing weapons from being illicitly traded and reducing the human cost of armed conflicts.”
The ATT is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland. President Bio’s envoy in Geneva, Ambassador Dr. Lansana Gberie, has been meeting Ambassadors of countries that have not yet ratified the ATT to hand-deliver President Bio’s letter.
Here are some of the photos from Geneva: