Arms control
Ending the world’s many conflicts may seem like an impossible task. But only if we help developing countries achieve peace, justice and security can we fulfil our aim of eradicating poverty.
Arms control
Recent figures show that, globally, 740,000 people die each year as a result of armed violence, with two-thirds of those deaths occurring outside war zones. This conflict and violence is often fuelled by the irresponsible trade in weapons.
There are an estimated 650 million small arms already in circulation, fed by a global and often uncontrolled arms trade. These weapons are used both in violent conflict and crime, particularly in poor countries and among poor communities.
And it is those poor countries that can least afford the cost of violence. In Burundi, for example, a country with per capita government expenditure on health of $5, each firearm injury costs the health system $163.
DFID works with a range of UK and international partners to reduce the impact of the arms trade on poor people in developing countries.
The cost of an unregulated arms trade
On the one hand, a responsible and well-regulated arms
trade can help states provide the security and stability
necessary for development. On the other hand, the arms trade
can have a very negative impact on development.
The UK and other EU countries have strict controls over
their arms exports, but most other countries do not. There
is no universal effective way to prevent irresponsible arms
sales to developing countries. This makes it possible for
unscrupulous arms dealers to circumvent the controls and
play one system off against another.
Irresponsible, inappropriate or corrupt arms deals are
directly responsible for:
-
reducing developing country government funds available for development
-
marginalising impoverished communities where these arms are misused to commit human rights abuses
-
fuelling armed conflicts and other forms of violence.
All of this undermines developing countries' economies and their ability to lift their people out of poverty.
An Arms Trade Treaty
This is why DFID, along with the Foreign Office and Ministry of Defence, has been leading work in the UN to develop a global Arms Trade Treaty. Such a treaty would control the arms trade and put a stop to irresponsible transfers of weapons and all the associated human costs.
An Arms Trade Treaty would help governments decide whether or not to approve licence applications for international arms sales. The treaty would assess:
-
the impact of an arms deal on sustainable development objectives
-
whether the arms sales would be used for violations of economic, social, and cultural rights
-
whether the sales would provoke or exacerbate armed conflict
-
whether the sales would involve significant corrupt practices.
As part of DFID's lobbying campaign for the
Arms Trade Treaty, and in order to understand the potential
impact an effective treaty could have on poor people in
developing countries, DFID commissioned Oxfam to write a
briefing paper,
Shooting
Down the MDGs - How irresponsible arms transfers undermine
development.
Cluster Munitions
Unexploded ordnance from cluster munitions can remain in the ground for decades, threatening lives and livelihoods, hampering post-conflict reconstruction and hindering development.
On 3 December 2008, the UK joined almost 100 other
countries and signed a treaty called the
Cluster
Munitions Convention, which bans the use, production,
stockpiling and transfer of cluster munitions.
DFID spends around £10 million per year on clearing mines and explosive remnants of war (including unexploded cluster munitions). Our support provides immediate relief to civilian populations from the threat posed by cluster munitions which have failed to detonate.
The money pays for the removal of thousands of landmines or unexploded munitions each year – each of which is an area of land available for safe use, and potentially a life or limb saved.
Links

Unlicensed firearms on sale in Afghanistan.
By 2010, half of the world’s poorest people will be in countries at risk of, or recovering from fighting.
Douglas Alexander Secretary of State