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DISARMAMENT: The Silent Killers in the World's War Zones
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - When mortars and rockets fall silent in the world's battle zones, the killings do not necessarily end with ceasefires and peace talks.
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POLITICS: Big Powers Split on Proposed Arms Trade Treaty
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - The United Nations is responding positively to a call from peace activists and human rights organisations for a new international treaty to monitor the world's growing 1.1-trillion-dollar global arms trade.
MORE >>
 

POLITICS: Anti-War Activists Push for U.N. Arms Treaty
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - A coalition of human rights organisations and anti-war activists has renewed its campaign for a new international treaty to regulate the world's fast-growing 1.1-trillion-dollar global arms trade.
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As part of a proposed restructuring of the U.N. Secretariat, the new Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon toyed with the idea of transforming the "Department for Disarmament Affairs" into an "Office for Disarmament Affairs". The mere suggestion brought strong opposition not only from the 117-member Non-Aligned Movement, the largest single political bloc of developing nations, but also from more than 100 anti-war groups, NGOs and peace activists, who see the proposed move as a demotion of the disarmament issue at the U.N.

Ban said that was not his intention, but rather he hopes to strengthen the Office for Disarmament Affairs by bringing it directly under his wing, and he has pledged that it will be headed by an Under-Secretary-General, not a lower-ranked Assistant Secretary-General.

Nevertheless, his decision to introduce changes in the existing Department -- "if it ain't broke, don't fix it", says one peace activist -- remains the subject of debate among NGOs and delegations.

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UN Department for Disarmament Affairs
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