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UN:
RISE IN WEAPONS-RELATED CRIME WORRIES UN PANEL INVESTIGATING LIBERIA
SANCTIONS: 13/12/2007 (MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network /
- 13 December 2007 --
A group of United Nations experts said that
while it has found no evidence of arms flows across Liberia’s borders, the
dramatic increase in armed robberies involving firearms is a cause for concern
and merits the attention of the Security Council committee monitoring the arms
embargo imposed on the West African nation.
Armed
robbery rates for the capital, Monrovia, have increased significantly compared
to 2006, with firearms involved in about a third of cases, according to the
panel of experts established by the Council.
“This
worrisome development has raised the profile of the debate over rearming
Liberia’s security services and has highlighted some of the challenges
confronting the establishment of sustainable rule of law,” the group states in
a new report.
It
recommends that the Council’s “1521 Committee,” which monitors the Liberia
sanctions regime, carefully review the status of past exceptions to the arms
embargo and inventories of weapons already transferred to the country before
approving any further transfers of military material to Liberian security
services.
The
Committee should also request that the Liberian Government step up its
inspection of approved shipments and to consider using international and
regional standards for the marking of all weapons, the group adds.
The
panel of experts was appointed by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in July to renew
investigations of whether UN sanctions against Liberia are being broken, after
learning of allegations that former president Charles Taylor may still have
access to considerable wealth.
In what
the panel refers to as a “significant milestone in its work,” the experts
were invited by Nigeria to visit the country to investigate the allegations. The
Nigerian authorities informed them that they were unable to find conclusive
evidence of any funds, economic assets or investments made by Mr. Taylor in
Nigeria. Since the panel has not yet received copies of the Government’s
reports, it cannot confirm these findings.
The
panel is also tasked with assessing the implementation of forestry legislation
signed into law last October by President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, and with
gauging the Government’s compliance with the Kimberley Process Certification
Scheme, a mechanism established to keep “blood diamonds” from reaching world
markets.
While
there was no confirmed case of diamond smuggling into Liberia, the panel states
that the Government should ensure that Ivorian diamonds do not pass through its
porous borders and enter its legitimate trade, adding that “there is a need
for heightened sensitivity to potential shifts in trade flows.”
Commending
the Government for its progress in this area, the panel urges that it ensure its
internal controls are effectively implemented. Doing so will require strong
leadership and effective management of human, financial and material resources,
the panel states.
In the
area of forestry, the group says the Forestry Development Authority (FDA)
continues to move forward in the right direction although progress is sometimes
slow, noting that planning and management of fiscal resources remain
“significant challenges.”
The
Council lifted its ban on Liberian timber in June 2006 in recognition of Ms.
Johnson-Sirleaf’s efforts in managing the nation’s forests. The FDA is
tasked with developing a forest policy and a national forest management
strategy, among other matters.
Labels: United
Nations, U.N.,
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