NEPAL: Government urged to do more to curb small arms
Source: IRIN
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
KATHMANDU, 2 September 2007 (IRIN) - Activists and human rights campaigners in Nepal believe the government
and political parties could do more to control small arms, which continue to maim and kill innocent people. "The flow of small arms is out of control and the government has failed to do
anything
Arms continue to pose a huge threat to most civilians," arms control activist Bishnu Upreti told IRIN on 30 August. In 2007 over 135 people were killed by small arms used by various
pro-Madhesi militant or Maoist groups, according to human rights non-governmental organisation (NGO) Informal Sector Service Centre (INSEC). The decade-long armed conflict between the Nepalese
government and Maoists led to the deaths of over 14,000 people due mainly to the use of small arms. Rights and anti-arms activists hoped the November 2006 peace agreement would lead to action to rid
the country of small arms: The UN-supervised disarmament of former Maoist soldiers was a great opportunity for the government to ban the use of small arms country-wide, said rights activist Jagdish
Dahal, who is also a member of the Asia Small Arms Network (SASANET), a regional group lobbying to control weapons proliferation. Border controls Activists, who are unable to put a figure on the
number of small arms in the country, say the key to reducing their proliferation is to step up controls on the border with India. Most of the guns are allegedly smuggled via the adjacent Indian
states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. "We need to start a collaborative action with the Indian police so that criminals are not able to smuggle in the arms and deliver them to militant groups easily,"
said Upreti. Activists at risk Dahal said activists were at risk of being targeted by armed factions and criminals involved in gun-running. "A lot of people have become victims and been abducted,
killed or threatened by the use of small arms
especially in the Terai," he said. "We are also very worried and the government is still trying to ban small arms but it is not easy given the
current situation," said a senior government official, requesting anonymity. "The situation of arms getting into the hands of militant groups and criminals is really a matter of serious concern
because it is unarmed civilians who are most at risk," said a local businessman in Birgunj city, 250km south of the capital, requesting anonymity. He said hundreds of businessmen had been threatened
and/or told to pay protection money. The small arms include pistols, muzzle loaders, 12-bore and 22-bore guns, air guns, rifles and shotguns, as well as raw materials for improvised explosive
devices (IEDs), according to local NGO Friends for Peace. nn/at/ar/cb© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.irinnews.org









