OISTE Foundation and Zermatt Summit Foundation Sign the Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration
Zermatt (ots)
OISTE Foundation and Zermatt Summit Foundation Sign the Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration Calling on the International Community to Address all Forms of Illicit Trade at the 2019 Zermatt Summit
The OISTE Foundation, the Zermatt Summit Foundation, Sucafina, Integral Petroleum, Philip Morris International and delegates from 46 different countries, signed the Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration launched at the 2018 Zermatt Summit, calling on the International Community to address all forms of Illicit Trade.
Despite considerable efforts from global organizations, governments and activists from the private sector, Illicit Trade remains prevalent and continues to pose a significant threat to the global economy.
The Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration outlines the steps that need to be taken to stop Illicit Trade, which as governments and private sector signatories agree, needs to be treated as a serious crime. Today, with the digitalization of economies and recent technology developments, the fundamentals of trade are transforming in both legal and illegal economies. Improved global networks, real time data sharing systems and online platforms enable a more efficient supply of illicit products and increase the number of parties participating in this market, creating significant challenges for legitimate manufacturers, governments and other operators within affected industries.
Therefore, illicit trade has become a major contributor to discrepancies in wealth between the developing and developed world, while fueling devastating conflicts and undermining the legitimacy of countries. In effect, illicit trade is the conduit that facilitates destabilization and dangerous activities in nearly every sphere of the global economy. As a result - new forms of Illicit Trade have appeared and will continue to develop making the fight against it more complex and transnational than ever. - Illicit Trade hinders the fundamental building blocks of development, democracy, human rights and rule of law. It enables corrupt practices among government officials and private citizens alike. - each year, an increasing number of goods and brands are affected by Illicit Trade across all industries. There is an urgency to develop an Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration to enhance awareness of the issue and respond to these challenges. The OISTE Foundation and the Zermatt Summit with a high-profile panel of international experts therefore launched at the September 2018 Zermatt Summit the Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration. The declaration was presented to the international community via a global roadshow calling on the international community to address all forms of Illicit Trade, promote due diligence and supply chain controls, and foster cooperation between state and non-state actors in developing sustainable solutions.
Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration Main principles: - Treat Illicit Trade as a serious crime within the UN Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime (UNCAT), the UN Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC), and Agreement on Trade Related aspect of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), - Address problems of corruption and money laundering related to Illicit Trade with legislation - a zero tolerance policy; - Strengthen legal frameworks and help law enforcement; - Improve cross-agency mechanisms to contrast Illicit Trade crime; - Endorse governments which are destroying Illicit Trade products; - Pressure governments as well as any other entities which use or facilitate the usage of products derived from Illicit Trade; - Drive criminal entrepreneurs out of business; - Reduce incentives to enter illegal markets; - Reduce opportunities for organized crime to enter the financial system; - Help governments sustain legitimate markets and foster UN sustainable Goals (UN SDGs). Illicit trade has a negative impact on economic stability, social welfare, public health, public safety & our environment - examples include: o Health & Safety - narcotics, fake medicines & foods, tobacco, defective materials; o Environment - environmental crimes affecting flora and fauna; o Human Rights Exploitation - forced human trafficking, prostitution and slavery; o Finance - illicit financial flows, trade-based money laundering criminality and terrorism; o Government - reduction of tax revenues & legitimate employment, social instability and insecurity; o Economy - wealth and rule of law; To this end, the signatories are adopting the Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration and the principles below: 1. We are committed to collaborate with all relevant stakeholders - whether an individual, organization or government - irrespective of their acumen, culture, location or motive to pursue a long-term sustainable strategy to combat Illicit Trade as a global threat to the world economy. 2. We support the development of innovative technological solutions to ensure the protection and traceability of products and services with a view to stop Illicit Trade in all of its forms. 3. We will assist with the establishment of the next generation of tracking and tracing systems based on interoperable open and recognized international standards consistent with applicable laws. 4. that will enable tighter controls in securing supply chains and preventing the circulation of Illicit Trade products and services. 5. We will support the creation of a cryptographic key (Root of Trust) to provide dual factor authentication keys using asymmetric technology to digitally tag products and protect them against Illicit Trade. 6. We will work with each other and will establish formal and informal partnerships with governments, innovators, security experts, civil society, academia, private actors and other stakeholders to foster technical collaboration to counter Illicit Trade. 7. We will study the strengths, weaknesses and interlinkages in the way that our multijurisdictional world economy influences the advancement of a coherent system for trusted identities required to secure international trade, ecommerce platforms and IoT. 8. We will encourage global information sharing to identify, prevent, and detect Illicit Trade and ensure flexible responses to secure of the wider global trade ecosystem. 9. To ensure the establishment of a meaningful partnership through the implementation of the Anti-Illicit Trade Declaration, we, the undersigned companies, will continue to define collaborative activities that we will undertake to further this Declaration. We will also report publicly on our progress in achieving these goals. Signatories
About Zermatt Summit Foundation
Since 2010, the Zermatt Summit has been held annually in Switzerland. Primarily aimed at business /financial leaders and entrepreneurs, in an action-oriented dialogue together with change makers, from civil society, academics, education, fine arts, architecture, medicine, spirituality and the public sector. The Zermatt Summit annual conference program is a catalyst to inspire, to share innovation and to translate new business development models into action, prioritizing human dignity in our globalized world. More information: http://www.zermattsummit.org
About OISTE Foundation
Founded in Switzerland in 1998, OISTE was created with the objectives of promoting the use and adoption of international standards to secure electronic transactions, expand the use of digital certification and ensure the interoperability of certification authorities' e-transaction systems. The OISTE Foundation is a not for profit organization based in Geneva, Switzerland, regulated by article 80 et seq. of the Swiss Civil Code. OISTE is an organization in special consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC) and belongs to the Not-for-Profit constituency (NPOC) of the ICANN. More information: http://www.oiste.org.
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