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Amnesty International supports sustained ban on arms

Amnesty International has supported the ban on sale of arms and ammunition to Liberia, as recommended by a UN panel of experts, saying this will ensure the protection of human rights in that country. The Security Council is currently considering the panel's latest report and reviewing sanctions on Liberia. "Given the widespread nature of human rights abuses by both sides in the continuing armed conflict in Liberia, the provision of arms and ammunition and other forms of military assistance - whether direct or indirect - can be reasonably assumed to contribute to human rights abuses against civilians," Amnesty said in a news release on Friday. Liberian government forces and militia fighting on behalf of the government continue to commit, with almost total impunity, extrajudicial executions, torture and ill-treatment, including rape and other forms of sexual violence, as well as arbitrary arrests and detentions, it said. The armed opposition Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy (LURD) has also been responsible for serious human rights abuses against civilians, including deliberate and arbitrary killings, torture, including rape, abductions and the recruitment of children as combatants, Amnesty said. According to the organisation, effective action needs to be taken to prevent military transfers to both sides in the conflict, which also threatens the stability of its neighbours, Guinea and Sierra Leone. "If not effectively addressed, the situation in Liberia will have potentially disastrous consequences for the protection of human rights of civilians in all three Mano River Union countries," Amnesty said. While efforts to tackle the link between the illicit trade in diamonds and arms have had a significant impact, reports of the Panel of Experts have also made an explicit link between the Liberian timber industry and the arms trade. "We are seriously concerned about reports that revenue from the timber industry, and the activities of individual timber companies, facilitate the acquisition of arms and ammunition or other military assistance to government forces and government-allied militia," the organization added. "Amnesty International therefore supports the recommendation of the Panel of Experts that there should be a sustained financial audit of the Liberian timber industry by an international auditing team, to follow that being undertaken by Deloitte and Touche over a limited period. This longer-term audit should be fully independent and verifiable and its findings made public," it added.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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