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YEMEN: Moves afoot to reduce number of fire-arms in cities
20 Sep 2007 13:38:17 GMT
Source: IRIN
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SANAA, 20 September 2007 (IRIN) - "Guns have caused us to suffer and lead a miserable life," said Ashwaq Mohammed, 27, remembering her husband who was killed four years ago in a shooting incident.

"My husband was waiting for lunch in our yard when his close friend jokingly pointed a pistol at his head. A bullet was fired and ended his life."

Ashwaq, from Sanaa Province, is a mother of five, has no job and depends on her family to survive, but her plight is not uncommon.

A recently published Interior Ministry report blamed the accidental firing of fire-arms for the deaths of thousands of people in Yemen over the past three years, and the authorities have now moved to reduce the number of fire-arms in the main cities in a bid to stem the deaths.

Over the past three years about 5,000 deaths and 18,500 injuries have been caused by guns in a total of 24,632 reported incidents, according to the Interior Ministry report.

In late August 2007, in an effort to reduce arms-related crime, the Interior Ministry banned the carrying of arms - including licensed fire-arms - inside the capital, Sanaa, as well as in provincial capitals. The move is also designed to boost tourism, investment and development, the ministry said.

The ban stipulates that bodyguards of high-ranking officials are allowed to carry pistols providing they are concealed. Checkpoints have been set up both within and at the entrance to provincial cities.

Mohammed al-Qawsi, deputy minister of interior, said crime had decreased as a result, and the authorities say hundreds of arms have been confiscated since the ban took effect.

Further efforts needed

Observers, however, say it will take time and further efforts to rid major cities of people carrying fire-arms: A bill to regulate the possession of arms has not yet been approved by parliament.

Aydarous al-Naqib, head of the Yemen Socialist Party Block in parliament, told IRIN there was no will among most members of parliament to pass the bill. "The ministry's decision to ban arms is a partial step forward. To achieve success a law needs to be passed banning the use arms," he said.

According to him, people resort to using arms as they do not feel protected. "In the absence of security, people will continue to carry arms for a long time. A safe environment must be provided before people stop using arms, "he said.

Armed clashes in rural areas are a common occurrence. Early this month, armed tribesmen in the southern province of Shabwa seized several oil tankers and the authorities had to use force to subdue them.

"The decision [ban] is sound and important. People have responded to it positively," said Abdul-Rahman Al-Marwani, chairman of Dar Al-Salaam Organisation to Combat Revenge and Violence, a local non-governmental organisation (NGO).

He told IRIN his NGO had been engaged in raising awareness about the dangers of carrying arms. "Our campaigns have also helped change the mindset of tribesmen," he said.

"People are now looking for peace. More anti-gun rallies will be held," he said, expressing hope that the move would have an impact on blood feuds and revenge killings which are still relatively common in rural areas, especially in the provinces of al-Baidha and Dhamar.

Some reports put the number of guns in the country at 40-50 million. According to the Small Arms Survey 2007, published by the Geneva-based Graduate Institute of International Studies, the US is the most heavily armed society in the world with 90 guns for every 100 citizens, followed by Yemen with 61 guns per 100 people, then by Finland 56, Switzerland 46, Iraq 39 and Serbia 38.

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