In 2025, the Trust Fund and its two Participating UN Organizations—the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)—continued to provide valuable support to authorities in the Western Balkans as they advance toward the goals set forth by the regional SALW Control Roadmap. As the region actively transitioned into the next strategic phase of the Roadmap (2025–2030), the efforts supported in 2025 have driven improvements across the five Roadmap goals, addressing legislative, operational, and institutional frameworks. This included the further harmonization of arms control legislation with international commitments, the enhancement of criminal justice responses to firearms-related crimes, and the next-level digitalization of data collection and investigative capabilities. Furthermore, 2025 saw a deepening of gender-responsive approaches and intelligence-led policymaking to tackle SALW-related threats, alongside the active engagement of a broader constituency of actors, civil society, and local communities.
The Trust Fund sustained its vital momentum thanks to the unwavering commitment of its six principal contributors: the governments of Germany, France, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and Norway, bolstered by the overarching strategic support of the European Union. In 2025, an additional US$ 1.86 million was contributed to the Fund, elevating the total value of contributions to the Trust Fund to US$ 30.4 million. With nine projects under active implementation, the Trust Fund’s Steering Committee allocated a further US$ 3.35 million across the projects in 2025, bringing the total value of ongoing initiatives across the region to US$ 15.4 million.
SEESAC served as the Secretariat for the Trust Fund, continuing to provide support to the Steering Committee and the Participating UN Organizations and facilitating the governance of the Trust Fund. Through the robust portfolio of ongoing projects, the Trust Fund reinforced its coordinated approach to supporting Western Balkans jurisdictions. By capitalizing on previous investments and synergies, these initiatives have successfully forged new alliances and strengthened local ownership. They have expanded knowledge resources, deepened community engagement, and ensured the integration of gender and human rights perspectives into SALW control. Individually and cumulatively, the MPTF-funded projects have sustained political and technical momentum and have also brought the Western Balkans closer to its commonly agreed vision: becoming a safer region and an “exporter of security”.
To access the report, please click here.