EU CODE OF
CONDUCT
ON ARMS EXPORTS
The Council of the
European Union,
BUILDING on the Common
Criteria agreed at the Luxembourg and Lisbon European
Councils in 1991 and 1992,
RECOGNISING the special
responsibility of arms exporting states,
DETERMINED to set high
common standards which should be regarded as the minimum
for the management of, and restraint in, conventional
arms transfers by all EU Member States, and to strengthen
the exchange of relevant information with a view to
achieving greater transparency,
DETERMINED to prevent the
export of equipment which might be used for internal
repression or international aggression, or contribute to
regional instability,
WISHING within the
framework of the CFSP to reinforce their cooperation and
to promote their convergence in the field of conventional
arms exports,
NOTING complementary
measures taken by the EU against illicit transfers, in
the form of the EU Programme for Preventing and Combating
Illicit Trafficking in Conventional Arms,
ACKNOWLEDGING the wish of
EU Member States to maintain a defence industry as part
of their industrial base as well as their defence effort,
RECOGNISING that states
have a right to transfer the means of self-defence,
consistent with the right of self-defence recognised by
the UN Charter,
have adopted the following
Code of Conduct and operative provisions:
CRITERION ONE
Respect for the
international commitments of EU member states, in
particular the sanctions decreed by the UN Security
Council and those decreed by the Community, agreements on
non-proliferation and other subjects, as well as other
international obligations
An export licence should
be refused if approval would be inconsistent with, inter
alia:
a) the international
obligations of member states and their commitments to
enforce UN, OSCE and EU aenforce UN, OSC
b) the international
obligations of member states under the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, the Biological and Toxin
Weapons Convention and the Chemical Weapons Convention;
c) their commitments in
the frameworks of the Australia Group, the Missile
Technology Control Regime, the Nuclear Suppliers Group
and the Wassenaar Arrangement;
d) their commitment not to
export any form of anti-personnel landmine.
CRITERION TWO
The respect of human
rights in the country of final destination
Having assessed the
recipient country's attitude towards relevant principles
established by international human rights instruments,
Member States will:
a) not issue an export
licence if there is a clear risk that the proposed export
might be used for internal repression.
b) exercise special
caution and vigilance in issuing licences, on a
case-by-case basis and taking account of the nature of
the equipment, to countries where serious violations of
human rights have been established by the competent
bodies of the UN, the Council of Europe or by the EU;
For these purposes,
equipment which might be used for internal repression
will include, inter alia, equipment where there is
evidence of the use of this or similar equipment for
internal repression by the proposed end-user, or where
there is reason to believe that the equipment will be
diverted from its stated end-use or end-user and used for
internal repression. In line with operative paragraph 1
of this Code, the nature of the equipment will be
considered carefully, particularly if it is intended for
internal security purposes.
Internal repression
includes, inter alia, torture and other cruel, inhuman
and degrading treatment or punishment, summary or
arbitrary executions, disappearances, arbitrary
detentions and other major violations of human rights and
fundamental freedoms as set out in relevant international
human rights instruments, including the Universal
Declaration on Human Rights and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
CRITERION
THREE
The internal situation in
the country of final destination, as a function of the
existence of tensions or armed conflicts
Member States will not
allow exports which would provoke or prolong armed
conflicts or aggravate existing tensions or conflicts in
the country of final destination.
CRITERION FOUR
Preservation of regional
peace, security and stability
Member States will not
issue an export licence if there is a clear risk that the
intended recipient would use the proposed export
aggressively against another country or to assert by
force a territorial claim.
When considering these
risks, EU Member States will take into account inter
alia:
a) the existence or
likelihood of armed conflict between the recipient and
another country;
b) a claim against the
territory of a neighbouring country which the recipient
has in the past tried or threatened to pursue by means of
force;
c) whether the equipment
would be likely to be used other than for the legitimate
national security and defence of the recipient;
d) the need not to affect
adversely regional stability in any significant way.
CRITERION FIVE
The national security of
the member states and of territories whose external
relations are the responsibility of a Member State, as
well as that of friendly and allied countries
Member States will take
into account:
a) the potential effect of
the proposed export on their defence and security
interests and those of friends, allies and other member
states, while recognising that this factor cannot affect
consideration of the criteria on respect of human rights
and on regional peace, security and stability;
b) the risk of use of the
goods concerned against their forces or those of friends,
allies or other member states;
c) the risk of reverse
engineering or unintended technology transfer.
CRITERION SIX
The behaviour of the buyer
country with regard to the international community, as
regards in particular to its attitude to terrorism, the
nature of its alliances and respect for international law
Member States will take
into account inter alia the record of the buyer country
with regard to:
a) its support or
encouragement of terrorism and international organised
crime;
b) its compliance with its
international commitments, in particular on the non-use
of force, including under international humanitarian law
applicable to international and non-international
conflicts;
c) its commitment to
non-proliferation and other areas of arms control and
disarmament, in particular the signature, ratification
and implementation of relevant arms control and
disarmament conventions referred to in sub-para b) of
Criterion One.
CRITERION SEVEN
The existence of a risk
that the equipment will be diverted within the buyer
country or re-exported under undesirable conditions
In assessing the impact of
the proposed export on the importing country and the risk
that exported goods might be diverted to an undesirable
end-user, the following will be considered:
a) the legitimate defence
and domestic security interests of the recipient country,
including any involvement in UN or other peace-keeping
activity;
b) the technical
capability of the recipient country to use the equipment;
c) the capability of the
recipient country to exert effective export controls;
d) the risk of the arms
being re-exported or diverted to terrorist organisations
(anti-terrorist equipment would need particularly careful
consideration in this context).
CRITERION EIGHT
The compatibility of the
arms exports with the technical and economic capacity of
the recipient country, taking into account the
desirability that states should achieve their legitimate
needs of security and defence with the least diversion
for armaments of human and economic resources
Member States will take
into account, in the light of information from relevant
sources such as UNDP, World Bank, IMF and OECD reports,
whether the proposed export would seriously hamper the
sustainable development of the recipient country. They
will consider in this context the recipient country's
relative levels of military and social expenditure,
taking into account also any EU or bilateral aid.
OPERATIVE PROVISIONS
1. Each EU Member State
will assess export licence applications for military
equipment made to it on a case-by-case basis against the
provisions of the Code of Conduct.
2. This Code will not
infringe on the right of Member States to operate more
restrictive national policies.
3. EU Member States will
circulate through diplomatic channels details of licences
refused in accordance with the Code of Conduct for
military equipment together with an explanation of why
the licence has been refused. The details to be notified
are set out in the form of a draft pro-forma at Annex A.
Before any Member State grants a licence which has been
denied by another Member State or States for an
essentially identical transaction within the last three
years, it will first consult the Member State or States
which issued the denial(s). If following consultations,
the Member State nevertheless decides to grant a licence,
it will notify the Member State or States issuing the
denial(s), giving a detailed explanation of its
reasoning.
The decision to transfer
or deny the transfer of any item of military equipment
will remain at the national discretion of each Member
State. A denial of a licence is understood to take place
when the member state has refused to authorise the actual
sale or physical export of the item of military equipment
concerned, where a sale would otherwise have come about,
or the conclusion of the relevant contract. For these
purposes, a notifiable denial may, in accordance with
national procedures, include denial of permission to
start negotiations or a negative response to a formal
initial enquiry about a specific order.
4. EU Member States will
keep such denials and consultations confidential and not
to use them for commercial advantage.
5. EU Member States will
work for the early adoption of a common list of military
equipment covered by the Code, based on similar national
and international lists. Until then, the Code will
operate on the basis of national control lists
incorporating where appropriate elements from relevant
international lists.
6. The criteria in this
Code and the consultation procedure provided for by
paragraph 3 of the operative provisions will also apply
to dual-use goods as specified in Annex 1 of Council
Decision 94/942/CFSP as amended, where there are grounds
for believing that the end-user of such goods will be the
armed forces or internal security forces or similar
entities in the recipient country.
7. In order to maximise
the efficiency of this Code, EU Member States will work
within the framework of the CFSP to reinforce their
cooperation and to promote their convergence in the field
of conventional arms exports.
8. Each EU Member State
will circulate to other EU Partners in confidence an
annual report on its defence exports and on its
implementation of the Code. These reports will be
discussed at an annual meeting held within the framework
of the CFSP. The meeting will also review the operation
of the Code, identify any improvements which need to be
made and submit to the Council a consolidated report,
based on contributions from Member States.
9. EU Member States will,
as appropriate, assess jointly through the CFSP framework
the situation of potential or actual recipients of arms
exports from EU Member States, in the light of the
principles and criteria of the Code of Conduct.
10. It is recognised that
Member States, where appropriate, may also take into
account the effect of proposed exports on their economic,
social, commercial and industrial interests, but that
these factors will not affect the application of the
above criteria.
11. EU Member States will
use their best endeavours to encourage other arms
exporting states to subscribe to the principles of this
Code of Conduct.
12. This Code of Conduct
and the operative provisions will replace any previous
elaboration of the 1991 and 1992 Common Criteria.
Return
to the EU Code of Conduct page
|