Audio By Carbonatix
Mr Baffour Dokyi Amoa, President of West African Action Network for Small Arms (WAANSA) on Friday said collaboration with civil society was crucial to augment efforts of West African Governments to prevent the proliferation of small arms and light weapons in the Sub-Region.
He said the challenge to combat accumulation of such weapons was not on the implementation of legislations but on how civil society would respect legal instruments and support security agencies.
Mr Dokyi Amoa made the observation when briefing the media on ECOWAS Convention on Small Arms and Light Weapons, their ammunition and related matters in Accra.
He said society must therefore be concerned on the issue, since they were the worse victims when accumulation of such weapons was on the increase.
Colonel Mahamane Toure, Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, and leader of a five-member team from ECOWAS Commission said the team was in Ghana on a three-day advocacy mission towards the ratification of the ECOWAS Convention.
He said the Convention was to reduce the incidence of violence and conflicts that had been blamed for the crises in the region to facilitate economic development in West Africa.
Col. Toure said the Convention, which had been ratified by only Niger, would also promote trust between member states through concerted and transparent action on the control of small arms and build institutional capacities to curb their proliferation.
He said the legislation expected to be ratified by nine member countries within ECOWAS, would consolidate the gains of the Declaration of the Moratorium on the importation, exportation and manufacture of arms and its Code of Conduct.
Col. Toure said the Convention would encourage local manufacturers of weapons to revert into alternative livelihood ventures such as the manufacturing of agriculture inputs.
Mrs Afi Yakubu, Coordinator for Ghana Action Network on Small Arms (GHANSA) said Ghana was active in spearheading the fight against small arms with the establishment of the National Commission on Small Arms.
She said although there was the need for countries to respect ECOWAS protocols in respect to the movement of people and trade, there was the need to strengthen security to check the importation of such weapons to engage in crimes.
Mrs Yakubu said to forestall difficulties in tracing local manufacturers and importers of such weapons, the Commission had developed an action plan to easily trace them.
The Convention endorsed by ECOWAS Heads of State and Governments has provisions on Operational Mechanisms; Institutional and Implementation Arrangements; Transparency and Exchange of Information, Transfer and Manufacturing of Small Arms.
It was adopted on June 14, 2006 in Abuja, Nigeria.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Interdiction is ridiculous — Ofori-Boadu demands stronger punishment for teachers who sexually abuse students
15 minutes -
We expect sanctions for both teacher and student in Bole SHS misconduct case – Clement Apaak
30 minutes -
Teacher, student both culpable under GES code in Bole SHS misconduct case – Clement Apaak
33 minutes -
Even if it’s just two or three schools, we ought to be worried — Deputy Education Minister on Ghana’s student misconduct crisis
37 minutes -
Bole SHS teacher violated professional code by engaging student sexually – Deputy Education Minister
43 minutes -
University campuses have no security — Gloria Ofori-Boadu calls for urgent safety policy reforms
1 hour -
Bentil calls for thorough probe into UCC student death, warns against premature conclusions
1 hour -
Education ministry, GES must act decisively to curb rising student indiscipline – Tuah-Yeboah
1 hour -
Almost nobody wants to enforce rules in our schools – Kofi Bentil
1 hour -
Who is in charge? — Kofi Bentil questions parents over school discipline crisis
1 hour -
Livestream: Ofori-Atta US residency, public sector resignations and student safety take centre stage on Newsfile
2 hours -
Timber Millers condemn attack on Forestry Commission checkpoint in Bono East
2 hours -
‘My father wanted me on the farm, my mother wanted me in school’ — Sissala East MP
2 hours -
Imperial–AIMS Global Fellows Programme champions climate innovation to tackle urban heat
2 hours -
5th edition of Game 11 football festival scheduled for July 11
2 hours