China Daily Global Weekly

China joins treaty to regulate illicit trade, transfer of convention­al arms

Nation’s accession another important step toward safeguardi­ng peace and stability, says ambassador

- By HONG XIAO xiaohong@chinadaily­usa.com

China’s envoy to the United Nations on July 6 affirmed the nation’s commitment to the Arms Trade Treaty, or ATT, to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

“The Chinese government attaches high importance to the problems caused by illicit transfer and abuse of convention­al arms. China supports the purposes and goals of the treaty and agrees on taking necessary measures to regulate the internatio­nal arms trade and combat illicit arms transfer,” said Zhang Jun, China’s permanent representa­tive to the UN, at a virtual news conference after depositing the instrument of accession document on July 6.

“China always strictly regulates export of military articles with policies and management measures meeting, or in some areas even exceeding, ATT requiremen­ts,” the ambassador said, adding that it is worth pointing out that China allows arms exports only to sovereign states and not nonstate actors.

“This fully demonstrat­es its high sense of responsibi­lity,” he added.

Zhang called on all parties to strictly regulate the export of military items, disallow exports to nonstate actors and to stop interferin­g in sovereign states’ internal affairs through arms exports.

The ambassador emphasized that accession to the ATT is “another important step in China’s active participat­ion in global arms trade governance to safeguard internatio­nal and regional peace and stability.

“It demonstrat­es China’s resolve and sincerity in maintainin­g the internatio­nal arms control regime, supporting multilater­alism and forging a community with a shared future for mankind,” he said.

“It will further enhance the treaty’s universali­ty and contribute to global security governance and the internatio­nal arms control process,” he added.

Zhang said that the world now faces multiple challenges and that unilateral­ism has become the source of trouble.

A “certain country has quit multilater­al arms control agreements and internatio­nal treaties and organizati­ons in succession (and) walked away from internatio­nal commitment­s, launched acts of unilateral­ism and bullying. This has brought huge uncertaint­ies to the global strategic balance and stability and seriously undermined the joint efforts of all countries to tackle global challenges,” he said.

“At this critical moment, major powers need to honor commitment­s, shoulder responsibi­lities and set an example by contributi­ng to safeguardi­ng the internatio­nal order, the rule of law, the role of the UN and multilater­alism,” he added.

The ATT was adopted by the UN General Assembly on April 2, 2013, and entered into force on Dec 24, 2014. With China’s accession, it now has 107 countries that have adopted it.

Depositing the instrument of accession marks the conclusion of the domestic legal procedures for China’s accession to the treaty. As per the provision of the ATT, the treaty will enter into force for China 90 days after the depositing of the instrument of accession.

Major powers need to honor commitment­s ... by contributi­ng to safeguardi­ng the internatio­nal order.

ZHANG JUN

China’s permanent representa­tive to the UN

 ?? GONZALO FUENTES / REUTERS ?? French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire (far left) is joined by Cabinet colleagues Gerald Darmanin, Olivier Dussopt and Alain Griset at a handover ceremony in Paris on July 6. French President Emmanuel Macron unveiled a Cabinet reshuffle on July 6 aimed at spearheadi­ng the country’s post-pandemic economic recovery in the remaining two years of his term.
GONZALO FUENTES / REUTERS French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire (far left) is joined by Cabinet colleagues Gerald Darmanin, Olivier Dussopt and Alain Griset at a handover ceremony in Paris on July 6. French President Emmanuel Macron unveiled a Cabinet reshuffle on July 6 aimed at spearheadi­ng the country’s post-pandemic economic recovery in the remaining two years of his term.

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