Wed, 3 Dec 06:43:22 GMT17

 
Top gun nations
02 Oct 2006 14:45:00 GMT
Written by: AlertNet
Venezuelan civil reservists parade with Kalashnikovs in Caracas. REUTERS/Jorge Silva
Venezuelan civil reservists parade with Kalashnikovs in Caracas. REUTERS/Jorge Silva

A litany of loopholes is helping weapons companies arm abusive regimes and ruin millions of lives a year, the campaign group Control Arms said on Monday as it called for a global binding arms trade treaty.

Here are some figures from Arms Without Borders, a report written by the group, which includes Oxfam and Amnesty International.

  • Global military spending is estimated to exceed $1 trillion this year - roughly 15 times annual international aid expenditure.
  • There are enough bullets in the world to shoot all 6 billion of us twice.
  • On average, up to 1,000 people die every day as a direct result of armed violence.
  • Military spending is expected to overtake peak Cold War levels by the end of 2006.
  • Between them, countries in Asia, the Middle East, Latin America and Africa spent an estimated $22.5 billion on arms during 2004.*
  • This sum would have enabled those countries to put every child in school and reduce child mortality by two-thirds by 2015 - two of the Millennium Development Goals.
  • Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan spent more on their military than on healthcare between 2002-03.
  • Some 92 countries produce small arms and light weapons, and 76 make small arms ammunition.
  • At least 14 countries make the Kalashnikov assault rifle, including Egypt and North Korea.
  • The United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France and Germany accounted for an estimated 82 per cent of all major conventional arms transfers in 2005.
  • Emerging exporters include Israel (with four companies in the top 100), India (three companies) and South Korea (three). There is insufficient data from Chinese companies, but it's generally recognised there are at least three significant players in China.
(*according to the U.S. Congressional Research Service)

For more on the global arms trade have a look at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute which produces reports every year.

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2 responses to “Top gun nations”

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  1. Md. Evan Shahriar says:

    This is absolutely true and really horrific. Many countries are not interested to invest their money in development sectors; rather they are happy to increase their military expenditures. This is a very bad sign, and this kind of attitude and decisions are not what we expected from them.

  2. Jack Blanchette says:

    I would assume then that there is a connection to low health care expenditures and the continued reduction in education expenditures. You see, if we assure that there are adequate supplies of guns and munitions, the equipment of war, then when we send our young to battle, they need not be overly healthy or educated as they'll likely die anyway, and money can be made in the process. A morbide though, yes.....but wrong, I think not, just ask the US administration.

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