Campaign Launched to Regulate Arms Trade

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By THOMAS WAGNER
Associated Press Writer

October 9, 2003, 2:28 PM EDT


LONDON -- For farmers in Uganda, AK-47 assault rifles are used instead of spears. In Somalia, weapons are so common that some children are named "Uzi" or "AK." In countries such as Iraq, there is more than one gun per person.

These findings were included in a report released Thursday by Amnesty International, Oxfam and another group as they launched a campaign in more than 50 countries aimed at controlling what they call a dangerously unregulated global arms trade that routinely allows weapons to reach repressive governments, human rights abusers and criminals.

The report said the possession of increasingly lethal weapons is becoming an integral part of daily life in many parts of the world. It also said that the U.S.-led war on terror, launched after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States, has "fueled weapons proliferation rather than focusing political will on controlling arms."

Increasing numbers of arms are being exported, especially by the United States and Britain, to newfound allies such as Pakistan, Indonesia and the Philippines, regardless of concerns about human rights abuses and widespread poverty there, the report said.

"Governments preoccupied with a search for nuclear, biological and chemical weapons in their fight against terrorism have essentially ignored the real weapons of mass destruction: small arms," said Rebecca Peters, director of the International Action Network on Small Arms group, which joined Amnesty and Oxfam in the initiative.

The "Control Arms" campaign -- launched by the three groups at news conferences around the world Thursday -- focuses on promoting a new international treaty covering arms transfers, as well as a number of regional and local measures designed to limit arms proliferation and misuse.

The groups began a petition drive aimed at gathering 1 million signatures supporting their draft international Arms Trade Treaty, which they hope to have adopted by the United Nations and its member countries by 2006.

As part of that campaign, the groups displayed 300 model gravestones in Trafalgar Square in central London, each containing the slogan "one person every minute killed by arms."

The report said more than 630 million small arms are in circulation around the world, more than one for every 10 people, and that someone is killed through armed violence every minute, or more than half a million people a year.

The report said existing national arms export controls are riddled with loopholes. The result is the easy availability of arms, which increases the incidence of armed violence, acts as a trigger for conflicts, and prolongs wars once they break out. Increasingly, civilians are being targeted in such attacks, the groups said.

Such conflicts and armed crime also often prevent international relief aid from reaching those who desperately need it, said the report.

"The arms trade is out of control," said Barbara Stocking, the director of Oxfam. "It is a global problem with horrific local consequences, and it is poor people who suffer most."

She said an international arms trade treaty is needed to stop the flow of arms to abusers and to help make the world safer. The groups also urged governments to control national arms exports, brokers and dealers.

The draft Arms Trade Treaty was developed by the three groups and other human rights and arms control organizations working with international legal experts, the report said. The central aim is to provide a set of common minimum standards for the control of arms transfers, based firmly on a state's existing responsibilities under international law.

The groups urged Britain -- which they called the world's second largest arms exporter after the United States -- to lead the way in supporting the proposed treaty.

British Foreign Officer Minister Mike O'Brien said Britain has been at the forefront of international arms control efforts and has a tough export control system itself. But he praised the report about the misuse of small arms and light weapons around the world, and he said such an international treaty would be a worthwhile goal.

* __

On the Net:

www.controlarms.org

www.amnesty.org

www.iansa.org

www.oxfam.org.uk
Copyright © 2003, The Associated Press

Don't want those lovers of freedom and independence to muk things up now do we.:cuss:
 
BWAAAHHH!:D I think these idiots are for real. Who do they think is doing all the killing--governments! What happend in Rwanda? Was it O.K. for the genocide to transpire there as people were butchered with edged weapons?

The U.S. or the UK??? ***? Where do you think all those Type 56s are being made? Massachusetts? Devonshire?

Who is buying them? Individuals? BWAAAHH!

Do they think gun making is some black art? You can make an AK on a flat rock with a backyard oven. An 8th grader in metal shoppe can make PPS 43. The world is not a violence-free petting zoo. Evil men will do evil--fight them. Firearms are just tools. They allow me to fight against repressive governments and that is why they wish to disarm me.
 
Amnesty does a lot of good work highlighting human rights abuses worldwide.
They are also one of the most rabidly anti-firearms international organizations in existence.

Moussolini made the trains run on time. Everyone is capable of doing some good works.
 
LONDON -- For farmers in Uganda, AK-47 assault rifles are used instead of spears.

Can't let the untermensch of Uganda use sophisticated tools like firearms, can we? They should be running around in loincloths, using spears, living like cavemen. Subtle racism like this is disgusting.



In Somalia, weapons are so common that some children are named "Uzi" or "AK."

Hey, stupid names are a universal phenomenon. Have you listened to roll-call at a local elementary school lately?

In countries such as Iraq, there is more than one gun per person.

Of course, noone should own more than one gun and in fact the population should be, for the most part, disarmed. Only those deemed to be fit to rule should be allowed to own weapons.

After reading the first paragraph, all I can say is

rolleyes.gif
 
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