Medicine Hat News

UN urges all countries to keep weapons from terrorist groups

-

The U.N. Security Council unanimousl­y adopted a resolution Wednesday urging all countries to eliminate the supply of weapons to the Islamic State extremist group and other “terrorists” including by taking legal action against suppliers and marking arms to improve their traceabili­ty.

The resolution, sponsored by Egypt, strongly condemns the continuing flow of weapons, military equipment, drones and improvised explosive devices to IS, al-Qaida and their affiliates as well as illegal armed groups and criminals.

“This is one of the first resolution­s aiming to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons,” Egypt's U.N. Ambassador Amr Abdellatif Aboulatta, the current Security Council president, said after the vote. “Arming of terrorists and terrorist groups ... is a crime that is no less heinous than the terrorist act itself.”

The resolution reaffirms the commitment of all states to preventing weapons from reaching “terrorists.” It urges the U.N.’s 193 member states “to prevent and disrupt procuremen­t networks for such weapons.” It also urges all countries “to act co-operativel­y to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons” including via the internet or social networks.

Yury Fedotov, executive director of the Vienna-based U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, told the council by video link that “terrorists obtain weapons by many means, in all parts of the world, facilitate­d by access to poorly secured stockpiles, weak border management, the use of online platforms including hidden marketplac­es, and diversion linked to poor transfer controls.”

Fedotov stressed the complex challenges to keep weapons from falling into the hands of terrorists, citing “inadequate regulatory environmen­ts and data collection, lack of specialize­d skills and equipment, and lack of coordinati­on within and between countries and regions.”

Interpol Special Representa­tive Emmanuel Roux told the council that although the use of weapons by terrorists isn’t new “today’s threat landscape is one of unpreceden­ted complexity.”

“Convergenc­e is the key word: between organized crime and terrorism; between old and new technologi­es; between military and law enforcemen­t efforts,” he said.

Roux said Interpol is seeing firearms used in conflict zones reappearin­g on streets of major cities, commercial products that are legal turned into improvised explosive devices, and guns manufactur­ed decades ago for sale on the dark web.

In parallel, he said foreigners who fight for terrorist groups may be exploiting their knowledge from the battlefiel­d, the organized crime contacts and supply chains they used previously, "and technology allowing the creation of modular firearms and 3D printing — to access and use weapons.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada