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Full Text (PDF format) | Signatories and Ratifications
THE STATES PARTIES,
AWARE of the urgent need to prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit
manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives,
and other related materials, due to the harmful effects of these
activities on the security of each state and the region as a whole,
endangering the well-being of peoples, their social and economic
development, and their right to live in peace;
CONCERNED by the increase, at the international level, in the illicit
manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives,
and other related materials and by the serious problems resulting
therefrom;
REAFFIRMING that States Parties give priority to preventing, combating,
and eradicating the illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in
firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related materials because of
the links of such activities with drug trafficking, terrorism,
transnational organized crime, and mercenary and other criminal
activities;
CONCERNED about the illicit manufacture of explosives from substances
and articles that in and of themselves are not explosives--and that are
not addressed by this Convention due to their other lawful uses--for
activities related to drug trafficking, terrorism, transnational
organized crime and mercenary and other criminal activities;
CONSIDERING the urgent need for all states, and especially those states
that produce, export, and import arms, to take the necessary measures to
prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit manufacturing of and
trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials;
CONVINCED that combating the illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in
firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related materials calls for
international cooperation, exchange of information, and other
appropriate measures at the national, regional, and international
levels, and desiring to set a precedent for the international community
in this regard;
STRESSING the need, in peace processes and post-conflict situations, to
achieve effective control of firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other
related materials in order to prevent their entry into the illicit
market;
MINDFUL of the pertinent resolutions of the United Nations General
Assembly on measures to eradicate the illicit transfer of conventional
weapons and on the need for all states to guarantee their security, and
of the efforts carried out in the framework of the Inter-American Drug
Abuse Control Commission (CICAD);
RECOGNIZING the importance of strengthening existing international law
enforcement support mechanisms such as the International Weapons and
Explosives Tracking System (IWETS) of the International Criminal Police
Organization (INTERPOL), to prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit
manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives,
and other related materials;
RECOGNIZING that international trade in firearms is particularly
vulnerable to abuses by criminal elements and that a
"know-your-customer" policy for dealers in, and producers, exporters,
and importers of, firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials is crucial for combating this scourge;
RECOGNIZING that states have developed different cultural and historical
uses for firearms, and that the purpose of enhancing international
cooperation to eradicate illicit transnational trafficking in firearms
is not intended to discourage or diminish lawful leisure or recreational
activities such as travel or tourism for sport shooting, hunting, and
other forms of lawful ownership and use recognized by the States
Parties;
RECALLING that States Parties have their respective domestic laws and
regulations in the areas of firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other
related materials, and recognizing that this Convention does not commit
States Parties to enact legislation or regulations pertaining to
firearms ownership, possession, or trade of a wholly domestic character,
and recognizing that States Parties will apply their respective laws and
regulations in a manner consistent with this Convention;
REAFFIRMING the principles of sovereignty, nonintervention, and the
juridical equality of states,
HAVE DECIDED TO ADOPT THIS INTER-AMERICAN CONVENTION AGAINST THE ILLICIT
MANUFACTURING OF AND TRAFFICKING IN FIREARMS, AMMUNITION, EXPLOSIVES,
AND OTHER RELATED MATERIALS:
Article I
Definitions
For the purposes of this Convention, the following definitions shall
apply:
1. "Illicit manufacturing": the manufacture or assembly of firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials:
a. from components or parts illicitly trafficked; or
b. without a license from a competent governmental authority of the
State Party where the manufacture or assembly takes place; or
c. without marking the firearms that require marking at the time of
manufacturing.
2. "Illicit trafficking": the import, export, acquisition, sale,
delivery, movement, or transfer of firearms, ammunition, explosives, and
other related materials from or across the territory of one State Party
to that of another State Party, if any one of the States Parties
concerned does not authorize it.
3. "Firearms":
a. any barreled weapon which will or is designed to or may be readily
converted to expel a bullet or projectile by the action of an explosive,
except antique firearms manufactured before the 20th Century or their
replicas; or
b. any other weapon or destructive device such as any explosive,
incendiary or gas bomb, grenade, rocket, rocket launcher, missile,
missile system, or mine.
4. "Ammunition": the complete round or its components, including
cartridge cases, primers, propellant powder, bullets, or projectiles
that are used in any firearm.
5. "Explosives": any substance or article that is made, manufactured, or
used to produce an explosion, detonation, or propulsive or pyrotechnic
effect, except:
a. substances and articles that are not in and of themselves explosive;
or
b. substances and articles listed in the Annex to this Convention.
6. "Other related materials": any component, part, or replacement part
of a firearm, or an accessory which can be attached to a firearm.
7. "Controlled delivery": the technique of allowing illicit or suspect
consignments of firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials to pass out of, through, or into the territory of one or more
states, with the knowledge and under the supervision of their competent
authorities, with a view to identifying persons involved in the
commission of offenses referred to in Article IV of this Convention.
Article II
Purpose
The purpose of this Convention is:
to prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit manufacturing of and
trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials;
to promote and facilitate cooperation and exchange of information and
experience among States Parties to prevent, combat, and eradicate the
illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms, ammunition,
explosives, and other related materials.
Article III
Sovereignty
1. States Parties shall carry out the obligations under this Convention
in a manner consistent with the principles of sovereign equality and
territorial integrity of states and that of nonintervention in the
domestic affairs of other states.
2. A State Party shall not undertake in the territory of another State
Party the exercise of jurisdiction and performance of functions which
are exclusively reserved to the authorities of that other State Party by
its domestic law.
Article IV
Legislative Measures
1. States Parties that have not yet done so shall adopt the necessary
legislative or other measures to establish as criminal offenses under
their domestic law the illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in
firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related materials.
2. Subject to the respective constitutional principles and basic
concepts of the legal systems of the States Parties, the criminal
offenses established pursuant to the foregoing paragraph shall include
participation in, association or conspiracy to commit, attempts to
commit, and aiding, abetting, facilitating, and counseling the
commission of said offenses.
Article V
Jurisdiction
1. Each State Party shall adopt such measures as may be necessary to
establish its jurisdiction over the offenses it has established in
accordance with this Convention when the offense in question is
committed in its territory.
2. Each State Party may adopt such measures as may be necessary to
establish its jurisdiction over the offenses it has established in
accordance with this Convention when the offense is committed by one of
its nationals or by a person who habitually resides in its territory.
3. Each State Party shall adopt such measures as may be necessary to
establish its jurisdiction over the offenses it has established in
accordance with this Convention when the alleged criminal is present in
its territory and it does not extradite such person to another country
on the ground of the nationality of the alleged criminal.
4. This Convention does not preclude the application of any other rule
of criminal jurisdiction established by a State Party under its domestic
law.
Article VI
Marking of Firearms
1. For the purposes of identification and tracing of the firearms
referred to in Article I.3.a, States Parties shall:
a. require, at the time of manufacture, appropriate markings of the name
of manufacturer, place of manufacture, and serial number;
b. require appropriate markings on imported firearms permitting the
identification of the importer's name and address; and
c. require appropriate markings on any firearms confiscated or forfeited
pursuant to Article VII.1 that are retained for official use.
2. The firearms referred to in Article I.3.b should be marked
appropriately at the time of manufacture, if possible.
Article VII
Confiscation or Forfeiture
1. States Parties undertake to confiscate or forfeit firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials that have been
illicitly manufactured or trafficked.
2. States Parties shall adopt the necessary measures to ensure that all
firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related materials seized,
confiscated, or forfeited as the result of illicit manufacturing or
trafficking do not fall into the hands of private individuals or
businesses through auction, sale, or other disposal.
Article VIII
Security Measures
States Parties, in an effort to eliminate loss or diversion, undertake
to adopt the necessary measures to ensure the security of firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials imported into,
exported from, or in transit through their respective territories.
Article IX
Export, Import, and Transit Licenses or Authorizations
1. States Parties shall establish or maintain an effective system of
export, import, and international transit licenses or authorizations for
transfers of firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials.
2. States Parties shall not permit the transit of firearms, ammunition,
explosives, and other related materials until the receiving State Party
issues the corresponding license or authorization.
3. States Parties, before releasing shipments of firearms, ammunition,
explosives, and other related materials for export, shall ensure that
the importing and in-transit countries have issued the necessary
licenses or authorizations.
4. The importing State Party shall inform the exporting State Party,
upon request, of the receipt of dispatched shipments of firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials.
Article X
Strengthening of Controls at Export Points
Each State Party shall adopt such measures as may be necessary to detect
and prevent illicit trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and
other related materials between its territory and that of other States
Parties, by strengthening controls at export points.
Article XI
Recordkeeping
States Parties shall assure the maintenance for a reasonable time of the
information necessary to trace and identify illicitly manufactured and
illicitly trafficked firearms to enable them to comply with their
obligations under Articles XIII and XVII.
Article XII
Confidentiality
Subject to the obligations imposed by their Constitutions or any
international agreements, the States Parties shall guarantee the
confidentiality of any information they receive, if requested to do so
by the State Party providing the information. If for legal reasons such
confidentiality cannot be maintained, the State Party that provided the
information shall be notified prior to its disclosure.
Article XIII
Exchange of Information
1. States Parties shall exchange among themselves, in conformity with
their respective domestic laws and applicable treaties, relevant
information on matters such as:
a. authorized producers, dealers, importers, exporters, and, whenever
possible, carriers of firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other
related materials;
b. the means of concealment used in the illicit manufacturing of or
trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials, and ways of detecting them;
c. routes customarily used by criminal organizations engaged in illicit
trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials;
d. legislative experiences, practices, and measures to prevent, combat,
and eradicate the illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials; and
e. techniques, practices, and legislation to combat money laundering
related to illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials.
2. States Parties shall provide to and share with each other, as
appropriate, relevant scientific and technological information useful to
law enforcement, so as to enhance one another's ability to prevent,
detect, and investigate the illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in
firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related materials and
prosecute those involved therein.
3. States Parties shall cooperate in the tracing of firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials which may have been
illicitly manufactured or trafficked. Such cooperation shall include
accurate and prompt responses to trace requests.
Article XIV
Cooperation
1. States Parties shall cooperate at the bilateral, regional, and
international levels to prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit
manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives,
and other related materials.
2. States Parties shall identify a national body or a single point of
contact to act as liaison among States Parties, as well as between them
and the Consultative Committee established in Article XX, for purposes
of cooperation and information exchange.
Article XV
Exchange of Experience and Training
1. States Parties shall cooperate in formulating programs for the
exchange of experience and training among competent officials, and shall
provide each other assistance that would facilitate their respective
access to equipment or technology proven to be effective for the
implementation of this Convention.
2. States Parties shall cooperate with each other and with competent
international organizations, as appropriate, to ensure that there is
adequate training of personnel in their territories to prevent, combat,
and eradicate the illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms,
ammunition, explosives, and other related materials. The subject matters
of such training shall include, inter alia:
a. identification and tracing of firearms, ammunition, explosives, and
other related materials;
b. intelligence gathering, especially that which relates to
identification of illicit manufacturers and traffickers, methods of
shipment, and means of concealment of firearms, ammunition, explosives,
and other related materials; and
c. improvement of the efficiency of personnel responsible for searching
for and detecting, at conventional and nonconventional points of entry
and exit, illicitly trafficked firearms, ammunition, explosives, and
other related materials.
Article XVI
Technical Assistance
States Parties shall cooperate with each other and with relevant
international organizations, as appropriate, so that States Parties that
so request receive the technical assistance necessary to enhance their
ability to prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit manufacturing of
and trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials, including technical assistance in those matters identified in
Article XV.2.
Article XVII
Mutual Legal Assistance
1. States Parties shall afford one another the widest measure of mutual
legal assistance, in conformity with their domestic law and applicable
treaties, by promptly and accurately processing and responding to
requests from authorities which, in accordance with their domestic law,
have the power to investigate or prosecute the illicit activities
described in this Convention, in order to obtain evidence and take other
necessary action to facilitate procedures and steps involved in such
investigations or prosecutions.
2. For purposes of mutual legal assistance under this article, each
Party may designate a central authority or may rely upon such central
authorities as are provided for in any relevant treaties or other
agreements. The central authorities shall be responsible for making and
receiving requests for mutual legal assistance under this article, and
shall communicate directly with each other for the purposes of this
article.
Article XVIII
Controlled Delivery
1. Should their domestic legal systems so permit, States Parties shall
take the necessary measures, within their possibilities, to allow for
the appropriate use of controlled delivery at the international level,
on the basis of agreements or arrangements mutually consented to, with a
view to identifying persons involved in the offenses referred to in
Article IV and to taking legal action against them.
2. Decisions by States Parties to use controlled delivery shall be made
on a case-by-case basis and may, when necessary, take into consideration
financial arrangements and understandings with respect to the exercise
of jurisdiction by the States Parties concerned.
3. With the consent of the States Parties concerned, illicit
consignments under controlled delivery may be intercepted and allowed to
continue with the firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials intact or removed or replaced in whole or in part.
Article XIX
Extradition
1. This article shall apply to the offenses referred to in Article IV of
this Convention.
2. Each of the offenses to which this article applies shall be deemed to
be included as an extraditable offense in any extradition treaty in
force between or among the States Parties. The States Parties undertake
to include such offenses as extraditable offenses in every extradition
treaty to be concluded between or among them.
3. If a State Party that makes extradition conditional on the existence
of a treaty receives a request for extradition from another State Party
with which it does not have an extradition treaty, it may consider this
Convention as the legal basis for extradition with respect to any
offense to which this article applies.
4. States Parties that do not make extradition conditional on the
existence of a treaty shall recognize offenses to which this article
applies as extraditable offenses between themselves.
5. Extradition shall be subject to the conditions provided for by the
law of the Requested State or by applicable extradition treaties,
including the grounds on which the Requested State may refuse
extradition.
6. If extradition for an offense to which this article applies is
refused solely on the basis of the nationality of the person sought, the
Requested State Party shall submit the case to its competent authorities
for the purpose of prosecution under the criteria, laws, and procedures
applied by the Requested State to those offenses when they are committed
in its own territory. The Requested and Requesting States Parties may,
in accordance with their domestic laws, agree otherwise in relation to
any prosecution referred to in this paragraph.
Article XX
Establishment and Functions of the Consultative Committee
1. In order to attain the objectives of this Convention, the States
Parties shall establish a Consultative Committee responsible for:
a. promoting the exchange of information contemplated under this
Convention;
b. facilitating the exchange of information on domestic legislation and
administrative procedures of the States Parties;
c. encouraging cooperation between national liaison authorities to
detect suspected illicit exports and imports of firearms, ammunition,
explosives, and other related materials;
d. promoting training and exchange of knowledge and experience among
States Parties and technical assistance between States Parties and
relevant international organizations, as well as academic studies;
e. requesting from nonparty states, when appropriate, information on the
illicit manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms, ammunition,
explosives, and other related materials; and
f. promoting measures to facilitate the application of this Convention.
2. Decisions of the Consultative Committee shall be recommendatory in
nature.
3. The Consultative Committee shall maintain the confidentiality of any
information it receives in the exercise of its functions, if requested
to do so.
Article XXI
Structure and Meetings of the Consultative Committee
1. The Consultative Committee shall consist of one representative of
each State Party.
2. The Consultative Committee shall hold one regular meeting each year
and shall hold special meetings as necessary.
3. The first regular meeting of the Consultative Committee shall be held
within 90 days following deposit of the 10th instrument of ratification
of this Convention. This meeting shall be held at the headquarters of
the General Secretariat of the Organization of American States, unless a
State Party has offered to host it.
4. The meetings of the Consultative Committee shall be held at a place
decided upon by the States Parties at the previous regular meeting. If
no offer of a site has been made, the Consultative Committee shall meet
at the headquarters of the General Secretariat of the Organization of
American States.
5. The host State Party for each regular meeting shall serve as
Secretariat pro tempore of the Consultative Committee until the next
regular meeting. When a regular meeting is held at the headquarters of
the General Secretariat of the Organization of American States, a State
Party that will serve as Secretariat pro tempore shall be elected at
that meeting.
6. In consultation with the States Parties, the Secretariat pro tempore
shall be responsible for:
a. convening regular and special meetings of the Consultative Committee;
b. preparing a draft agenda for the meetings; and
c. preparing the draft reports and minutes of the meetings.
7. The Consultative Committee shall prepare its own internal rules of
procedure and shall adopt them by absolute majority.
Article XXII
Signature
This Convention is open for signature by member states of the
Organization of American States.
Article XXIII
Ratification
This Convention is subject to ratification. The instruments of
ratification shall be deposited with the General Secretariat of the
Organization of American States.
Article XXIV
Reservations
States Parties may, at the time of adoption, signature, or ratification,
make reservations to this Convention, provided that said reservations
are not incompatible with the object and purposes of the Convention and
that they concern one or more specific provisions thereof.
Article XXV
Entry into Force
This Convention shall enter into force on the 30th day following the
date of deposit of the second instrument of ratification. For each state
ratifying the Convention after the deposit of the second instrument of
ratification, the Convention shall enter into force on the 30th day
following deposit by such state of its instrument of ratification.
Article XXVI
Denunciation
1. This Convention shall remain in force indefinitely, but any State
Party may denounce it. The instrument of denunciation shall be deposited
with the General Secretariat of the Organization of American States.
After six months from the date of deposit of the instrument of
denunciation, the Convention shall no longer be in force for the
denouncing State, but shall remain in force for the other States
Parties.
2. The denunciation shall not affect any requests for information or
assistance made during the time the Convention is in force for the
denouncing State.
Article XXVII
Other Agreements and Practices
1. No provision in this Convention shall be construed as preventing the
States Parties from engaging in mutual cooperation within the framework
of other existing or future international, bilateral, or multilateral
agreements, or of any other applicable arrangements or practices.
2. States Parties may adopt stricter measures than those provided for by
this Convention if, in their opinion, such measures are desirable to
prevent, combat, and eradicate the illicit manufacturing of and
trafficking in firearms, ammunition, explosives, and other related
materials.
Article XXVIII
Conference of States Parties
Five years after the entry into force of this Convention, the depository
shall convene a conference of the States Parties to examine the
functioning and application of this Convention. Each conference shall
determine the date on which the next conference should be held.
Article XXIX
Dispute Settlement
Any dispute that may arise as to the application or interpretation of
this Convention shall be resolved through diplomatic channels or,
failing which, by any other means of peaceful settlement decided upon by
the States Parties involved. Article XXX Deposit
The original instrument of this Convention, the English, French,
Portuguese, and Spanish texts of which are equally authentic, shall be
deposited with the General Secretariat of the Organization of American
States, which shall forward an authenticated copy of its text to the
Secretariat of the United Nations for registration and publication, in
accordance with Article 102 of the United Nations Charter. The General
Secretariat of the Organization of American States shall notify the
member states of the Organization of the signatures, of the deposits of
instruments of ratification and denunciation, and of any reservations.
ANNEX
The term "explosives" does not include: compressed gases; flammable
liquids; explosive actuated devices, such as air bags and fire
extinguishers; propellant actuated devices, such as nail gun cartridges;
consumer fireworks suitable for use by the public and designed primarily
to produce visible or audible effects by combustion, that contain
pyrotechnic compositions and that do not project or disperse dangerous
fragments such as metal, glass, or brittle plastic; toy plastic or paper
caps for toy pistols; toy propellant devices consisting of small paper
or composition tubes or containers containing a small charge or slow
burning propellant powder designed so that they will neither burst nor
produce external flame except through the nozzle on functioning; and
smoke candles, smokepots, smoke grenades, smoke signals, signal flares,
hand signal devices, and Very signal cartridges designed to produce
visible effects for signal purposes containing smoke compositions and no
bursting charges.