The Arms Trade

A legal trade
The arms trade is perhaps the most the most destructive, whilst also
being one of the most lucrative, trade for its key players. Unlike
its main rival in destroying lives, the illegal drugs trade, countries
can buy and sell weapons legally.
Yet many legally traded arms
are diverted into corrupt hands, and are then traded on the black
market to the highest bidder.
This is particularly the case in
small arm and light weapons – terms which include sub-machine
guns, portable anti-aircraft and anti-tank guns, and portable missile
launchers. These items continue to fuel modern conflicts. 
Depressing statistics
Within the last decade, over 6 million people have been killed in
conflicts around the globe. 90% of those killed are civilians,
with 80% being women and children.
Just 1% of annual global military
spending could educate every child in the world for the next ten
years. Half the world’s governments spend more on the military
than on healthcare.
Meanwhile, according to the UN, some 300,000
child soldiers around the world are carrying pistols and machine
guns. Many more are used by people living in deprived and dangerous
areas where carrying a weapon is a matter of survival. 
Removing the need
Ironically, it is the poorest states that invest most disproportionately
in armaments, often to ensure internal political stability or as
a means of self-defence.
Of course, the arms trade can not be stopped
overnight. Instead, a broad based international approach is needed
which tackles the problems behind these needs, such as initiatives
which alleviate poverty, support inclusive governments, and build
social infrastructures.
Also, tighter controls are needed to regulate
the sale of arms. It is still very easy for weapons to ‘slip
through the net’, by being sold to one country legally then
illicitly transferred to another. 
Alternative interests?
Perhaps the current fears of a rise in international terrorism will
finally make governments take action to reduce the number of arms
for sale in the world.
Yet at the same time, some governments have
a vested interest in the sale of armaments – they argue that
they provide employment as well as bring important revenue into
the economy.
These arguments have been countered by evidence showing
that by diversifying into other areas of production, jobs and
the economy do not suffer, whilst a reduction in arms sales will
ultimately
improve the life chances of peoples around the globe. |