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Geezah
06-20-2006, 01:19 PM
Three in 10 people questioned in a six-nation survey have been the victim of gun crime or know someone who has been in the last five years, gun control campaigners said on Monday.

The survey of about 1,000 people in each of Brazil, Britain, Canada, Guatemala, India and South Africa found widespread support for tighter international restrictions on trade in firearms, the Control Arms campaign said in a statement.

Control Arms is a joint initiative by human rights group Amnesty International, charity Oxfam International and the International Action Network on Small Arms, made up of hundreds of groups from around the world seeking tighter gun controls.

The survey, carried out by pollsters Ipsos MORI in April and May, was released a week before a major United Nations conference on illicit trade in small arms opens in New York.

Control Arms says there are around 640 million small arms and light weapons in the world and eight million more are produced each year. Weapons kill more than 1,000 people every day, it says.

Control Arms called on governments to introduce global principles to regulate transfers of weapons and ensure that they do not end up in the hands of human rights abusers.

Thirty percent of respondents in the six countries said that either they, someone in their family or someone they knew had been threatened, injured or killed with a gun in the last five years.

The number of people answering "yes" to the question ranged from three percent in India, nine percent in Canada and 11 percent in Britain to 51 percent in both Brazil and Guatemala and 54 percent in South Africa.

More than 60 percent of those questioned said they were "worried about becoming a victim of armed violence," with Brazil recording the highest figure at 94 percent and Canada the lowest at 36 percent.

An average of 62 percent of all those surveyed said it was too easy to obtain a gun in their country.

Eighty-seven percent of all respondents wanted "strict international controls on where weapons can be exported to" and 89 percent backed better controls on arms coming into their country, the survey found.

Link (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/19/AR2006061900020.html)

I'm not sure about Guatemala or India but I know that Britain, Canada and South Africa have some form of strict firearm control laws in place. So how will stricter laws make them any safer when two of those countries(Britain and South Africa) have more of less banned civilian ownership of firearms for the law abiding??

Bert
06-20-2006, 02:04 PM
Yeah, it's funny how their own findings contradict their own agenda, yet they don't even realise it themselves.

Hollis
06-20-2006, 02:41 PM
[ur=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/19/AR2006061900020.html]Link[/url]

I'm not sure about Guatemala or India but I know that Britain, Canada and South Africa have some form of strict firearm control laws in place. So how will stricter laws make them any safer when two of those countries(Britain and South Africa) have more of less banned civilian ownership of firearms for the law abiding??

Guatemala or Brazil does not surprise me. I was in Central America quite a while back, they have strick gun laws and lots of gun violance. In El Salvador there was the FMNL, and FDR rebels, who liked their firearms, and accourse La Guardia. Guatemala was real nasty for a while. I think worse than Nicaragua and El Salvador.


Now they should have ask people in Costa Rica.. Nice place.

Don Pascual
06-20-2006, 02:50 PM
Brazil have very strick gun laws, it is almost imposible buy a gun here, and now is virtualy imposible have gun carry permits.
Last year we had a referendun to prohibit gun comerce, but we voted against it. From the past decades, the government has implemented gun control laws even more stricter, but violence is increasing despiste those laws.

tsuri
06-20-2006, 02:53 PM
Woah the figure is quite low for South Africa. I suspect they were selective about the groups asked for their own safety ;)

Hollis
06-20-2006, 03:02 PM
Brazil have very strick gun laws, it is almost imposible buy a gun here, and now is virtualy imposible have gun carry permits.
Last year we had a referendun to prohibit gun comerce, but we voted against it. From the past decades, the government has implemented gun control laws even more stricter, but violence is increasing despiste those laws.

The two major groups that greatly benefit from a unarmed populace are the Criminals and Politcians.

Oddbod
06-20-2006, 10:26 PM
The two major groups that greatly benefit from a unarmed populace are the Criminals and Politcians.

Is there a difference between the two? ;-)

Hollis
06-21-2006, 12:11 AM
Is there a difference between the two? ;-)

A very good question. A old quote, "Some steal with a gun, some steal with a fountain pen."

Durandal
06-21-2006, 08:24 AM
A very good question. A old quote, "Some steal with a gun, some steal with a fountain pen."

I wonder which has been more damaging to this country. p-)

Hollis
06-21-2006, 11:56 AM
I wonder which has been more damaging to this country. p-)

The was a old FBI report on white collar crime (stealing with a Pen). In that year one criminal act cost the Americans more than combine reported street crimes for that year.