Regional Workshop on Curbing Small Arms and Light Weapons Trafficking and Increasing Border Security
As part of the project ‘Security Assessment in North Africa (SANA)’, Small Arms Survey organized this two-day workshop in Tunis, Tunisia, on 21-22 March 2015. The workshop provided an opportunity for participants to discuss the need for engagement with local communities in order to develop strategies for curbing illicit arms lows and trafficking. The workshop was attended by 38 participants, including government officials from North Africa, the Sahel and the Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs, as well as practitioners and experts from academia and NGOs. The workshop set out to create an analytical framework to help identify small arms and light weapons (SALW) traffickers and their modes of operation and the understanding the relating economic and social context of border communities and informal trade. It provided an opportunity for participants to discuss policy responses, best practices and other measures to combat illicit trafficking and diversion of SALW. The workshop sought to initiate an ongoing dialogue on these issues in the region that could last beyond the workshop and continue to engage workshop participants, policy-makers, and others with an interest in the topic.
The project ‘Security Assessment in North Africa (SANA)’ focuses on improving community safety by identifying issues related to effective weapons and ammunition stockpile security and addressing them, particularly through security sector reform. The project monitors government and international efforts to reconstruct and rehabilitate security institutions and their management of weapons and ammunition stockpiles. It is a multi-year project of the Small Arms Survey to support those engaged in building a more secure environment in North Africa and the Sahel-Sahara region. The project produces timely, evidence-based research and analysis on the availability and circulation of small arms, the dynamics of emerging armed groups and related insecurity, and examines measures and programmes undertaken to mitigate related threats and insecurity.
Small Arms Survey
Maison de la Paix, Chemin Eugène-Rigot 2E
1202 Geneva
Switzerland
Phone: +41 22 908 5777
E-mail: sas@smallarmssurvey.org