AFP, UNITED NATIONS
Friday, Nov 21, 2008, Page 7
Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez called on Wednesday for a
global reduction of military spending as a matter of international
security.
The UN Security Council later adopted a non-binding resolution inviting
other countries to follow this path.
“The perverse logic that leads a poor nation to spend excessive sums on
its armies, and not on its people, is exactly the antithesis of human
security, and a serious threat to international security,” said Arias
in an address before the council, over which Costa Rica presides this
month.
Although Costa Rica has no military, “it is not a naive nation,”
stressed Arias, a 1987 Novel Peace Prize laureate. “We have not come
here for the abolition of all armies. We have not even come to urge the
drastic reduction of world military spending, which has reached US$3.3
billion a day.”
He proposed instead that “a gradual reduction is not only possible, but
also imperative, particularly for developing nations.”
The Costa Rican president decried the limited application of Article 26
of the UN Charter, which advocates international arms control as a
means to avoid diverting human and economic resources.
“Article 26 has been, until now, a dead letter in the vast cemetery of
intentions for world peace,” he argued, promoting stronger
multilateralism instead. “As long as nations do not feel protected by
strong regional organizations with real powers to act, they will
continue to arm themselves at the expense of their people’s development
— particularly in the poorest countries — and at the expense of
international security.”
Arias urged the Security Council to apply the Costa Rica Consensus,
which forgives debt and provides aid for developing countries that
spend more on human resources than the military.
He also pressed the international body to support the Arms Trade
Treaty, which would control international arms sales to prevent the
illicit use of weapons.
“The destructive power of the 640 million small arms and light weapons
that exist in the world, 74 percent in the hands of civilians, has
proven to be more lethal than nuclear weapons, and is one of the
primary threats to national and international security,” he said.
The Security Council’s non-binding text expressed concern over
“increasing global military expenditure.”
The statement stressed “the importance of appropriate levels of
military expenditure in order to achieve undiminished security for all
at the lowest appropriate level of armaments” and called on countries
to “devote as many resources as possible to economic and social
development.”
Speaking to reporters after the statement was unanimously adopted,
Jorge Urbina, UN permanent representative for Costa Rica, said he was
satisfied with the outcome.
“We are happy that the Council, after almost 60 years, has retaken Article 26,” he said.
Source: Taipei Times