Key
developments since May 2001: Malta became a State Party to the Mine Ban
Treaty on 1 November 2001. Malta submitted its initial Article 7 Report on 30
April 2002.
The Republic of Malta signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 4 December 1997 and
ratified it on 7 May 2001, becoming a State Party on 1 November 2001. National
implementation measures enacted on 27 April 2001 use a design-based definition
of “antipersonnel mine” without reference to antihandling devices as
in Article 2.3 of the Mine Ban
Treaty.[1]
Malta attended the Third Meeting of States Parties in September 2001 in
Managua, Nicaragua, and the intersessional Standing Committee meetings in
January 2002, represented by Ambassador Michel Bartolo and Annabelle Mifsud,
Permanent Mission to the United Nations in Geneva, but not in May 2002.
Malta submitted its initial Article 7 Report on 30 April 2002. This
describes as “not applicable” the requirements to report on
stockpiled antipersonnel mines, mines retained under Article 3,
conversion/decommissioning of production facilities, destruction programs and
locations of mined areas. The voluntary Form J is included in the Article 7
Report, which records that in 2001 Malta contributed US$2,000 to the United
Nations Voluntary Trust Fund for Assistance in Mine
Action.[2]
On 29 November 2001, Malta cosponsored and voted in favor of United Nations
General Assembly Resolution 56/24M in support of the Mine Ban Treaty. In a
statement to the First Committee of the United Nations General Assembly
regarding Malta’s participation in the Third Meeting of States Parties,
Malta declared that it was “greatly heartened to witness the sterling work
of those delegations and members of Civil Society that have, in a few short
years, transformed the Anti-Landmines Movement into a workable Convention whose
provisions are respected not only by the ever increasing number of states
parties but also by non-states parties whose actions are coloured by the moral
strength of the
Convention.”[3]
Malta is a State Party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), but
has not ratified Amended Protocol II. Malta participated as an observer in the
Third Annual Conference of States Parties to Amended Protocol II and the Second
CCW Review Conference in December 2001.
[1] Legal Notice 97 of 2001, Government
Gazette No. 17087, 27 April 2001, issued under the National Interest (Enabling
Powers) Act (CAP. 365). [2] Article 7
Report, submitted on 30 April 2002 for the period 1 November 2001 - 30 April
2002. [3] Statement of Dr. Julian
Vassallo, Representative of Malta, at the general debate in the First Committee,
UN General Assembly, New York, 9 October 2001.