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IRIN Africa | Great Lakes | RWANDA: Government destroys 6,000 small arms | Peace Security | News Items
Monday 25 April 2005
 
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RWANDA: Government destroys 6,000 small arms


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  IRIN

A Rwandan soldier stands in front of a pile of small arms that the government destroyed, in accordance with a regional protocol on the destruction of illict arms.

KIGALI, 14 Apr 2005 (IRIN) - Rwanda has, for the first time, destroyed 6,000 small arms as part of a regional initiative to check the flow of illicit guns that have fuelled conflict in Africa's Great Lakes region, an official told IRIN on Thursday.

"We set them on fire," Maj Rwakabi Kakira, the coordinator of the Rwandan effort, said.

The guns - ranging from 5.2 mm to 82 mm in calibre and ammunition - were taken from former combatants and armed robbers. Others were part of an obsolete stock left behind by the country's pre-1994 genocide administration.

A proliferation of machine guns, rifles, grenades, pistols and other small arms has caused the deaths of millions of civilians in Africa and the displacement of millions more. These weapons have been used in conflicts in Angola, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sudan, Sierra Leone, Somalia and Uganda.

In 1994, an interethnic conflict in Rwanda left at least 937,000 people dead; most of them were killed with machetes and light guns. An estimated 300,000 civilians have died in similar circumstances in Burundi and hundreds of thousands others in the DRC.

In Uganda, a rebel group in the north of the country has used small arms to abduct and kill women and children. In war-torn Somalia, an AK-47 assault rifle costs less than US $20.

In April 2004, 11 countries from the Great Lakes and the Horn of Africa signed an agreement in Nairobi, Kenya, to combat illicit manufacturing, trafficking and use of small arms in the subregion.

As a result of signing the "Nairobi Declaration" on the problems of the proliferation of illicit small arms, the Rwandan government formed a National Focal Point to deal with the menace.

Member states that signed the declaration called for the destruction and disposal of these weapons.

[ENDS]


Other recent RWANDA reports:

Thousands of Congolese flee insecurity,  22/Apr/05

Refugees could be joining rebels, minister says,  21/Apr/05

Over 1,000 refugees flee to Uganda,  20/Apr/05

UN agency relocates newly arrived refugees,  18/Apr/05

IMF, World Bank write off Kigali's $1.4 billion debt,  14/Apr/05

Other recent Peace Security reports:

TOGO: More deaths and charges of fraud in controversial presidential poll, 25/Apr/05

LIBERIA: People start registering for first post-war elections but not in droves, 25/Apr/05

TOGO: Political foes agree to form unity government after crisis talks in Nigeria, 25/Apr/05

TOGO: Interior Minister calls for suspension of presidential election to avoid bloody conflict, 22/Apr/05

MIDDLE EAST: MIDDLE EAST: Weekly round-up Number 18 for 15-21 April 2005, 22/Apr/05

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