UNITED NATIONS RESOLUTION N 61/66 "THE ILLICIT TRADE IN SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS IN ALL ITS ASPECTS"

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UNITED NATIONS RESOLUTION N 61/66 "THE ILLICIT TRADE IN SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS IN ALL ITS ASPECTS" INFORMATION PROVIDED BY ITALY ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE UN 2001 PROGRAMME OF ACTION TO PREVENT, COMBAT AND ERADICATE THE ILLICIT TRADE IN SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS IN ALL ITS ASPECTS 1

1. ITALIAN LEGISLATION - GENERAL FEATURES. The approach of the Italian legislation towards the issue of SALW production, marking, record keeping, stockpiling and transfer is extremely stringent. According to the Italian legislation the category of small arms and light weapons is divided into two sub-categories: common firearms and weapons for military use. These are regulated by different laws whose implementation falls, respectively, within the responsibilities of the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of Defence. The Italian legislation governing the armaments sector hinges upon three basic laws that regulate all different aspects of this sensitive field: the Royal Decree 2482, dating back to 1935, regulates the Provisions for the control of Armed Forces regular weapons, manufactured by the private industry and envisages a mandatory testing of these weapons conducted by Institutions of the previous Ministry of War (at present the Ministry of Defence); in 1975, in order to clarify this specific matter, Law n. 110 was passed containing the supplementary provisions to the regulations in force for the control of weapons, ammunitions and explosives. Indeed, Law 110/75, by dividing weapons in military weapons and common firearms, regulates the latter subcategory falling within the responsibilities of the Ministry of the Interior, for which it is envisaged a registration system similar to the one long adopted by the Ministry of Defence. In particular, art.1 defines military weapons as follows:...of any kind that, due to their high offence capability, are or might be used for the armament of national or foreign troops for military use, as well as any kind of bombs and their components.... On the basis of the above definition, an ad-hoc inter-departmental Committee assesses whether a weapon falls within the category of common firearms and provides for its registration in the national register. Common firearms include revolvers, semiautomatic weapons and their ammunitions. Law n. 110 of 18 April 1975 also regulates the import and export of these weapons: the Ministry of the Interior has decentralised relevant administrative procedures, assigning them to provincial police headquarters. Import, export and transit of small arms and light weapons for military use are regulated by Law n. 185 of 9 July 1990, under the responsibility of Ministry of Foreign Affairs, acting in agreement with the Ministry of Defence. 2. NATIONAL MARKING SYSTEM USED IN MANUFACTURE AND/OR IMPORT. Italy ratified the UN Convention against Transnational Crime and its Protocols (including the Protocol against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearams, Their Parts and Components and Ammunition) on March 16, 2007 with Law no 146/2006. Italian Law on firearms (in this case L. 110/75) has been amended 2

accordingly. In particular manufacture and import marking has been introduced that permit the identification of each firearms through some information, such as: a unique serial number, the year of import, the country of origin and the marking of the Italian Republic or other marking in case of arms imported from a country outside the EU. (See the Annex). Detailed procedures indicated in previous reports submitted by Italy still apply. 3. NATIONAL PROCEDURES FOR CONTROL OVER MANUFACTURE. Due to the ratification of the above mentioned Convention, Italian law (in this case the Comprehensive Law on Public Security ) has been amended accordingly. In particular, as far as maintenance of information related to firearms at manufacture and at commercial sale is concerned, records will be kept, according to the amended law, for ten years. Detailed procedures indicated in previous reports submitted by Italy still apply. 4. NATIONAL LEGISLATION AND CURRENT PRACTICE ON EXPORT POLICY, PROCEDURES AND DOCUMENTATION, AND ON CONTROL OVER INTERNATIONAL BROKERING. a) Control on exports No new legislation has been approved in 2006 on the matter. Detailed procedures indicated in previous reports submitted by Italy still apply. b) Control on brokering activities Following the adoption of the EU Common Position 2003/468/CFSP of 23.6.2003 on the control of arms brokering. Italy has established an inter-agency working group - under the co-ordination of the Ministry of Justice - tasked to adapt the national legislation accordingly. It is worth confirming that, though a specific legislation on brokering activities is not in place, provisions of Law n. 185/1990 actually cover brokering activities related to import into, export from or transit through in the Italian territory of small arms and light weapons. The request of authorisation for any of these activities - which is compulsory - shall in fact provide indications of brokering fees, if present, paid for each transaction. 5. TECHNIQUES AND PROCEDURES FOR THE DESTRUCTION OF SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS. No new legislation has been approved in 2006 on the matter. Detailed procedures indicated in previous reports submitted by Italy still apply. 3

In 2006, Italian armed forces destroyed the following small arms and light weapons, identified as surplus: 770 Beretta self-loading pistols, mod. 34 ; 93,697 Garand M1 rifles ; 37,390 FAL BM59 assault rifles; 8,231 miscellaneous. Total: 140,088 small arms and light weapons destroyed. 6. NATIONAL SECURITY PROCEDURES FOR SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS STOCKPILE. No new legislation has been approved in 2005 on the matter. Detailed procedures indicated in previous reports submitted by Italy still apply. 7. NATIONAL COORDINATION. In 2006, the ad hoc technical working group on small arms and light weapons, established in Italy since June 2000 under the guidance of the Ministry of Foregn Affairs, which includes representatives of relevant ministries, law enforcement agencies and relevant manufacturers association, met once. The Group provides an appropriate forum where to discuss the most relevant aspects of the issue, including major developments at the national and international level. Discussions were mainly focussed on preparation of the 2006 Reviw Conference of the UN Programme of Action (PoA) against the illicit trafficking of small arms and light weapons, on the implementation of the multilateral instrument on marking and tracing. Due consideration was also given to the debate in other relevant multilateral fora (UNGA First Committee, OSCE, Wassenaar Agreement, G8). Furthermore, as indicated sub 4.b, since summer 2003 the Ministry of Justice has established an inter-agency working group tasked to adapt the national legislation to the EU Common Position 2003/468/CFSP on arms brokering. 8. INTERNATIONAL COORDINATION. a) United Nations In 2006, Italy attended the Review Conference of the 2001 UN Programme of Action against the illicit trafficking of small arms and light weapons, held in New York from 26 June to 7 July 2006. At the 61 th UNGA Italy co-sponsored the following adopted resolutions, which are relevant to small arms and light weapons: 4

- res. 61/71: Assistance to States for curbing the illicit traffic in small arms and light weapons ; - res. 61/72: Problems arising from the accumulation of conventional ammunitions in surplus ; - res. 61/77: Transparency in armaments ; - res. 61/89 Towards an arms trade treaty establishing common international standards for the import, export and transfer of conventional arms. - res. 61/101: Strengthening of security and co-operation in the Mediterranean region ; Italy also voted in favour of the resolution n. 61/66 ( Illicit trade in small arms and light weapons in all its aspects ). b) OSCE In 2006, Italy has continued to actively implement the OSCE document on small arms and light weapons, adopted in November 2000. In that framework, Italy presented national updates to the information exchange on major aspects of SALW (production, marking, export controls, brokering, destruction techniques) established by the above OSCE document. c) Seminars and conferences In the period 1.5.2006-30.4.2007 Italy participated to the following regional seminars aimed at exchanging information on national procedures and identifying common solutions to problems related to the illicit trafficking of small arms and light weapons: OSCE special meeting on SALW in preparation for the UN Review Conference on the PoA (Vienna, 17 May 2006); Workshop on MANPADS organized by the Australian Permanent Mission to the Conference on Disarmament (Geneva, 16 June 2006); UNODC International Seminar on the Control of Illicit Firearms and Ammunition Trafficking in Mercosur (Asuncion, 6-8 November 2006); Workshop on MANPADS organized by the Australian Permanent Mission to the Conference on Disarmament (Geneva, 18 January 2007); Tokyo workshop on Small Arms and Light Weapons: SALW Issue from the perspective of Protecting and Bulding the Peaceful Community (Tokyo, 12-13 March 2007); OSCE FSC Special meeting on combating the illicit trafficking of SALW by Air ( Vienna, 21 March 2007). 5

d) Other initiatives In 2006, Italian Armed Forces participating in multilateral peace-keeping opera tions collected and/or seized and destroyed the following small arms and light weapons: In Iraq: - 12 AK 47 assault rifles; - 4 grenade launchers RPG; - 4 rocket launchers; - 1 light machine-guns; - 1 mortar; - 14 miscellaneous. Sub total: 36 small arms and light weapons destroyed. In Kosovo: - 14 AK47 assault rifles; - 28 rifles; - 2 carbines; - 1 rifle M59; - 6 hunting rifles; - 1 grenade launcher RPG; - 7 rocket launchers; - 4 light machine guns; - 1 RPG 2; - 2 mortars; - 1 musket; - 18 pistols; - 575 miscellaneous. Sub total: 658 small arms and light weapons destroyed. In Bosnia: - 82 rifles; - 9 rocket launchers; - 115 miscellaneous. Sub total: 207 small arms and light weapons destroyed. Total: 901 small arms and light weaons destroyed. 6

9. NATIONAL POINT OF CONTACT. The Italian national point of contact for small arms and light weapons is Counsellor Emanuele Farruggia, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, General Department of Multilateral Political Affairs, Disarmament and Non Proliferation Desk (Tel.: ++ 39 06 3691 4000; Telefax: ++ 39 06 3235927; e- mail: emanuele.farruggia@esteri.it ). The Italian national point of contact for small arms and light weapons traceability is Dr. Giovanni Aliquò, Department of Public Security, General Administration Office ( Tel.: ++39 06 46546020; Telefax: ++39 06 46549538; e-mail: polam.armi@interno.it) Annex Type of information provided on firearms by markings Markings provided as per below specification make any given firearm uniquely identifiable and traceable. Civil / Sport market FIREARMS MODEL CALIBER OR GAUGE NAME OF MANUFACTURER LOGO OF MANUFACTURER COUNTRY OF ORIGIN SERIAL NUMBER IF APPLICABLE NATIONAL CATALOG NUMBER AS PER ITALIAN LAW 110/75 NATIONAL PROOFING HOUSE STAMP EVIDENCING : o YEAR OF MANUFACTURE o OVERPRESSURE TEST FOR U.S. MARKET ONLY NAME,CITY AND STATE OF THE IMPORTER. Military market ( military firearms identified as per Italian law 110/75 ) FIREARMS MODEL CALIBER OR GAUGE 7

NAME OF MANUFACTURER LOGO OF MANUFACTURER COUNTRY OF ORIGIN SERIAL NUMBER IF REQUIRED NATIONAL PROOFING HOUSE STAMP EVIDENCING : o YEAR OF MANUFACTURE o OVERPRESSURE TEST FOR U.S. MARKET ONLY NAME,CITY AND STATE OF THE IMPORTER. IF REQUIRED NSN ( NATO STOCK NUMBER ) MARKINGS, FOR ITALIAN GOVERNMENT FORCES STAMPING OF MILITARY QUALITY ASSURANCE INSPECTORS 8