The Modern Successor to the Slave Trade
No longer should the peace business be undermined by the arms
business
By Desmond Tutu
09/13/06 "The Independent" -- -- For many years, I've been
involved in the peace business, doing what I can to help people
overcome their differences. In doing so, I've also learnt a lot
about the business of war: the arms trade. In my opinion it is
the modern slave trade. It is an industry out of control: every
day more than 1,000 people are killed by conventional weapons.
The vast majority of those people are innocent men, women and
children.
There have been international treaties to control the spread of
nuclear, chemical and biological weapons for decades. Yet,
despite the mounting death toll, there is still no treaty
governing sales of all conventional weapons from handguns to
attack helicopters. As a result, weapons fall into the wrong
hands all too easily, fuelling human rights abuses, prolonging
wars and digging countries deeper into poverty.
This is allowed to continue because of the complicity of
governments, especially rich countries' governments, which turn
a blind eye to the appalling human suffering associated with the
proliferation of weapons.
Every year, small arms alone kill more people than the atomic
bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki put together. Many more
people are injured, terrorised or driven from their homes by
armed violence. Even as you read this, one of these human
tragedies is unfolding somewhere on the planet.
Take the Democratic Republic of Congo, where armed violence
recently flared up again, and millions have died during almost a
decade of conflict. Despite a UN arms embargo against armed
groups in the country, weapons have continued to flood in from
all over the world.
Arms found during weapons collections include those made in
Germany, France, Israel, USA and Russia. The only common
denominator is that nearly all these weapons were manufactured
outside Africa. Five rich countries manufacture the vast
majority of the world's weapons. In 2005, Russia, the United
States, France, Germany and the UK accounted for an estimated 82
per cent of the global arms market. And it's big business: the
amount rich countries spend on fighting HIV/Aids every year
represents just 18 days' global spending on arms.
But while the profits flow back to the developed world, the
effects of the arms trade are predominantly felt in developing
countries. More than two-thirds of the value of all arms are
sold to Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America.
In addition to the deaths, injuries and rapes perpetrated with
these weapons, the cost of conflict goes deeper still,
destroying health and education systems.
For example, in northern Uganda, which has been devastated by 20
years of armed conflict, it has been estimated that 250,000
children do not attend school. The war in northern Uganda, which
may be finally coming to an end, has been fuelled by supplies of
foreign-made weapons. And, as with so many wars, the heaviest
toll has been on the region's children. Children under five are
always the most vulnerable to disease, and in a war zone
adequate medical care is often not available.
The world could eradicate poverty in a few generations were only
a fraction of the expenditure on the war business to be spent on
peace. An average of $22bn is spent on arms by countries in
Asia, the Middle East, Latin America and Africa every year,
according to estimates for the US Congress. This sum would have
enabled those countries to put every child in school and to
reduce child mortality by two-thirds by 2015, fulfilling two of
the Millennium Development Goals.
This year, the world has the chance to finally say no to the
continuing scandal of the unregulated weapons trade. In October,
governments will vote on a resolution at the UN General Assembly
to start working towards an Arms Trade Treaty. That Treaty would
be based on a simple principle: no weapons for violations of
international law. In other words, a ban on selling weapons if
there is a clear risk they will be used to abuse human rights or
fuel conflict. The UN resolution has been put forward by the
governments of Australia, Argentina, Costa Rica, Finland, Japan,
Kenya, and the UK. These governments believe the idea of an Arms
Trade Treaty is one whose time has come.
I agree. We must end impunity for governments who authorise the
supply of weapons when they know there's a great danger those
weapons will be used for gross human rights abuses. Great
strides are being made towards ending impunity for war
criminals. It cannot be acceptable that their arms suppliers
continue to escape punishment. No longer should the peace
business be undermined by the arms business. I call on all
governments to put the control of the international arms trade
at the top of their agenda.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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