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Appendix 7C. Transparency in arms transfers

Contents

I. Introduction

II. The United Nations Register of Conventional Arms

III. National and regional reports on arms exports

IV. Publishing information on brokering licences

Figure 7C.1. Number of reports submitted to the United Nations Register of Conventional Arms (UNROCA), 1999–2008

Table 7C.1. Numbers of EU member states submitting a complete data set to the EU annual report, 2004–2009

Table 7C.2. States participating in international, regional, and national reporting mechanisms which aim, in whole or in part, to increase the quality of publicly available information on international arms transfers, 2007–2009

 

Appendix 7C describes the current status of existing mechanisms for international transparency in arms transfers. Read the full appendix [PDF]

Summary

Official and publicly accessible data on arms transfers is important for assessing states’ arms export and arms procurement policies. However, publishing data on arms sales and acquisitions is a sensitive issue for nearly all states.

 

The United Nations Register of Conventional Arms (UNROCA) is the key international mechanism of official transparency on arms transfers. The recent downward trend in states’ participation in UNROCA continued during 2009. As of 31 December 2009, only 79 states had submitted reports on their arms transfers during 2008. 

 

Since the early 1990s an increasing number of governments have published national reports on arms exports.  As of January 2010, 32 states had published at least one national report on arms exports since 1990, and 28 have done so since 2006.

 

Reports to UNROCA, 1999–2008

Reports to UNROCA, 1999–2008

 

Mark Bromley (United Kingdom) is a Researcher with the SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme, where his work focuses on European arms exports and export controls and South American arms acquisitions.

 

Dr Paul Holtom (United Kingdom) is the Director of the SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme.

Dr Mark Bromley and Paul Holtom
English