Trading in arms, both legal and illegal, is highly detrimental to the health of mothers and children in the countries where armed conflict occurs. But do the powerful arms trading countries want to address the problems they are causing?
Aid workers have no doubts about the impact of armed conflict on the death and suffering of mothers and children. To prove that trading in arms makes a major contribution to poor health is challenging, because it coexists in poor countries with massive debt, corrupt bureaucracies, and natural disasters. We report on the devastating effects of legal and illegal weapons exported into poor countries in conflict in Africa and Asia.
Summary points
More than 85% of the major conflicts since the second world war have been in poor countries
During the 1990s the poorest countries of the world became saturated with arms, with brokers often supplying both sides of a conflict
Between 1986 and 1996, a major proportion of those dying as a result of armed conflicts were civilians, particularly women and children
Huge differences in the health of mothers and children exist between the poor countries undergoing conflict and the predominantly rich countries exporting arms to them
Legal trading in arms should be a responsibility of a newly configured United Nations, and much more regulation of arms manufacturing companies is needed
International laws and their aggressive enforcement should stop illegal arms trading, including its support systems
Methods
Drawing on the work of international organisations,w1-w4 we conducted the following analyses:
A review of literature on conflict and arms trading
The mechanisms by which major weapons and small arms exported during 1990-2000 reached the 10 poorest countries engaged in armed conflict in 2000
The health status of mothers and children in these countries compared with the 10 largest arms exporting countries.
Armed conflict
More than 85% of the major conflicts since the second world war have been in poor countries.w5 Fifty seven major armed conflicts occurred in 45 different locations between 1990 and 2001,w6 involving 16 of the world's 20 poorest countries.w7 Many of these conflicts have been longstanding. In 2000, for example, war had lasted for 22 years in Afghanistan, 35 years in Angola, and 12 years in Somalia.w5
Most conflicts since 1990 have occurred in countries where government armies were poorly organised; paramilitary factions acted as the driving force, using ideological or political agendas to justify their actions. Warring factions obtained arms from international backers in exchange for money, narcotics, or precious minerals. These trades led to the development of sophisticated war based economies that fostered conflict, such as the cases of diamond trafficking from Angola and Sierra Leone.w8 w9 (See bmj.com for analyses of the supply of weapons to the 10 countries with the highest mortality and engaged in conflict during 2000).
Once a country contains a critical number of weapons, the need for protection leads to their proliferation. The actions of paramilitary organisations, such as the indoctrination of children to kill family members,w5 and of racketeers who use violence and intimidation to pillage local resources, contribute to destabilisation of societies. Conflicts in Ugandaw10 and the Democratic Republic of Congo illustrate these points (see bmj.com).
The trading of arms from rich countries to poor countries
During the 1990s the poorest countries of the world became saturated with arms; some originated from “legal” transfers, and many formed part of the illegal trade. The arms trade destabilised already fragmented countries, making development difficult and blurring distinctions between use for military and criminal purposes. Outside governments openly or clandestinely supplied arms to factions they favoured for political reasons or for access to resources,w11 as did some multinational companies.w9 Many loopholes allowed weapons to enter unstable or embargoed countries—for example, ineffective or falsified end user certificates and licensed production in or brokerage through intermediate, poorly regulated countries (box ).w12-w14 Arms brokers often supplied both sides in a conflict.w9
Box . Evading the rules for legal arms trading.
The rules governing export were “legally” evaded in at least three ways.
Brokering through intermediate countriesw9
For example, British companies or individual British nationals (brokers or middlemen) did not need export licences when buying arms from another country and supplying them to a third foreign country (usually poorly resourced and governed). The United States and Germany require brokering to be licensed.
Producing arms in other countries
For example, British (unlike American) manufacturers producing arms in their overseas factories did not need export licences. In 1995, licensed production of small arms occurred in 21 developing countries, 16 of which exported them to other developing countries.w12-14
Exploiting the end user system
Licences to allow export may only be granted if an end user certificate defining usage is first obtained from the recipient country. In countries with poor governance, end user certificates were easy to obtain, and subsequent shipments were not subject to verification that they were being used in agreed ways.
Trade in major conventional weapons
In 1972, poor countries received 48% of their weapons free from the United States and the Soviet Union. By 1982 donations had declined to around 14%, but the total value of exports to non-oil producing developing countries had doubled, leading many into debt.w15 During the 1990s the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council were the main manufacturers and exporters of major conventional weapons, delivering 65-96% of their exported arms to developing countries between 1997 and 2000 (table 1).w16 Arms were supplied to countries on both sides of the various conflicts, reducing the resources available for health and education. For example, the United Kingdom, United States, Russia, Germany, and Canada supplied both India and Pakistan with weapons despite Pakistan spending less than 1% of its gross domestic product on health.w17 Many weapons exported to poor countries were second hand, often accompanied by trained military support; some were sold from vast stockpiles left over from the cold war.w18 w19
Table 1.
Country
|
Trade (millions of constant (2000) US dollars)
|
Percentage of total arms exports going to developing countries*
|
---|---|---|
United States | 68 040 | 65.5 |
United Kingdom | 21 833 | 86.5 |
France | 18 797 | 87.7 |
Russia | 11 887 | 78.3 |
Germany | 5 568 | 30.0 |
China | 2 537 | 95.8 |
Italy | 1 586 | 67.4 |
All other European countries | 12 991 | 68.4 |
All other countries | 7 884 | 36.1 |
Total | 151 123 | 70.2 |
Defined as all countries except United States, Russia, European countries, Canada, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand.
Trade in small arms and light weapons
Although the poorest countries struggled to afford major weapons, they could buy small arms. The AK 47 rifle, for example, can be bought in Africa for a bag of maize and in Afghanistan for $10 (£6.45, €10). It needs little maintenance and with minimal training can be a deadly weapon, even when used by young children.w20 Apart from being cheap and easy to manufacture, small weapons are also readily transported, smuggled, and hidden.
In 47 of 49 major conflicts between 1990 and 2000 small arms and light weapons were the main weapons used,w11 w21 causing incalculable human suffering.w22 They continually threaten development and have been the principal weapons used in conflicts characterised by abuse of human rights.w23 An estimated 600 million small arms and light weapons exist—one for every 10 people on earth.w24 They are responsible for the vast majority of conflict casualties,w25 and in 2001 they were implicated in more than 1000 deaths a day, mostly of mothers and children.w26
Small arms are not included in the control of major arms trading. The UN register of conventional arms is mainly concerned with the threat that major weapons pose to international or regional stability, rather than stability within countries. Indeed, the UN acknowledges that the challenge posed by small arms “involves security, humanitarian and developmental dimensions.”w27 The UN supports the need to control the proliferation of small arms but is challenged by the fact that the five permanent members of the Security Council are among the main suppliers.w26 Despite attempts by the United States and the European Union to work together to combat the small arms trade,w28 the United States and some members of the EU (United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, and Belgium) are among the main exporters. The International Action Network on Small Arms coordinates more than 340 organisations from 71 countries to prevent the proliferation and misuse of small arms and light weapons.w29
Illegal arms trading
Although 80-90% of the global trade in small arms is legal,w22 trading in illegal arms (defined by the UN as exports that violate national or international laww30) accounts for over 50% of all weapons in circulation.w31 As most poor countries have minimal systems to regulate the ownership of weapons, this definition applies only to arms exported to countries under mandatory arms embargoes from countries where licensing systems exist. Most illegal arms start out legally and become illegal by brokered sales, theft, and corruption, most often when non-state actors are supplied for political or economic reasons.
In the 1990s, sophisticated ploys reminiscent of other organised crimes such as drugs trafficking were used to distribute illegal weapons. For example, cargo aircraft supplying weapons flew circuitous routes, often at night using their own navigation systems, multiple landings, changes of aircraft, or falsification of aircraft registration. Pilots and planes were registered to “flags of convenience” and sometimes delivered during an “emergency landing” close to receiving factions. In Africa, where many countries have poor accountability, bureaucracy, customs procedures, and air traffic control, it was easy to complete illegal deliveries. The US Bureau of Intelligence and Research and Amnesty International reported that air charter companies from the United Kingdom and Belgium supplying arms to Rwanda, Congo, and Sierra Leone were unknown to and untouchable by law enforcers in their countries of origin.w14 w32
The human costs of conflict
The international arms trade is the substrate for global armed conflict, causing enormous human suffering, and mothers and children are the most vulnerable people. According to Unicef, between 1986 and 1996 two million children were killed in armed conflict, six million were seriously injured or permanently disabled, and countless others were forced to witness or take part in violence.w5 A major proportion of victims were civilians, particularly women and children.w5 w33 w34 In her report to Unicef, Graça Machel stated that “Wars have always victimised children and other non-combatants, but modern wars are exploiting, maiming and killing children more callously than ever.”w5
The indirect effects of armed conflicts cause most fatalities in mothers and children and includew5 w23 w35-w38
Food deprivationw39
Spread of disease, in part due to disruption of public health systems
Psychological and emotional damage (two thirds of Angolan children had witnessed murder)w5
Disability
Separation of families (in 1995, 20% of Angolan children were separated from their families)w5
Loss of education
Sexual abuse of children, including deliberate rape to drive out ethnic minorities
Child abduction, torture, and slaveryw10
Child soldiers (in 1998, for example, at least 300 000 children aged under 18 were soldiers).w40 w41
Another consequence of conflict is displacement. In 1997, 13.2 million people were refugees and 4.9 million were internally displaced,w42 disproportionately more of whom were women and children than in the source population.w43 In Rwandan refugee camps child mortality was as high as 300 per 100 000 per day.w44 Child mortality in displaced communities was more than 60% higher than among non-displaced children in the same country.w45 In contrast, in 2001 the United States and the United Kingdom, two major arms exporters, provided haven for only 4.3% and 1.2% of the world's refugees (which totalled 12 million).w33 w46
Huge differences in the health of mothers and children exist between the 10 poorest countries undergoing conflict in 2000 and the predominantly rich countries that exported arms to them (directly or indirectly) (table 2).w47 w48 Scaling each country to a population of 50 million gives figures of 2009 children aged under 5 years dying each day and 46 667 mothers dying each year during pregnancy or childbirth in the poorest country (Sierra Leone) compared with 15 children per day and 91 mothers per year in the country supplying the most arms (United States). Arms exports cannot be said to have directly caused this disparity, but to believe that they have not contributed would be unrealistic. These differences are so great that they question the humanity of arms exporting countries (box ). Armed conflict and weapons trading may thus be seen as a form of maternal and child abuse.
Table 2.
No of children aged <5 dying each day
|
No of women dying during pregnancy and childbirth each year (1995 data)
|
|
---|---|---|
10 poorest countries engaged in conflict during 2000 | ||
Sierra Leone | 2009 | 46 667 |
Angola | 1926 | 34 466 |
Afghanistan | 1835 | 19 175 |
Somalia | 1513 | 37 368 |
Democratic Republic of Congo | 1307 | 24 272 |
Burundi | 1018 | 42 500 |
Ethiopia | 1054 | 44 922 |
Rwanda | 996 | 40 385 |
Pakistan | 668 | 3 903 |
Uganda | 940 | 25 907 |
10 countries exporting the most arms in the years 1996-2000 | ||
United States | 15 | 91 |
Russia | 33 | 337 |
France | 9 | 131 |
United Kingdom | 9 | 65 |
Germany | 7 | 56 |
Netherlands | 9 | 65 |
Ukraine | 30 | 212 |
Italy | 7 | 52 |
China | 103 | 539 |
Belarus | 40 | 168 |
Box . Example of arms trading to opposing sides of the conflictw1 w49.
The Democratic Republic of Congo is a strategically important country rich in natural resources. The country became independent in 1960, and Mobutu Sese Soko became president in 1965. Despite corruption and abuses of human rights, the United States supplied Congo with $300 million worth of military hardware and $100 million worth of military training over the next 30 years.w49 Laurent Kabila came to power in 1997, and fighting broke out in 1998; the forces from eight countries became embroiled.w14 The United States has helped to build the arsenals of eight of the governments involved. Weapons also flowed into this part of Africa illegally, with brokers operating out of many countries, including the United Kingdom, France, and Belgium.w14
Opposing sides | ||
---|---|---|
Democratic Republic of Congo, factions from Zimbabwe, Angola, Chad, Namibia | Factions from Rwanda, Uganda, Burundi | |
Provider of military training | United States | United States |
Suppliers of small arms and light weapons | United States, United Kingdom, Germany, South Africa, Finland, Denmark, Canada | United States, United Kingdom, South Africa, |
Suppliers of major weapons | United States, France, Russia, China, Italy, Denmark, South Africa, Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Brazil, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Poland, Libya. Yugoslavia, Belarus, Georgia, Hungary, Moldova | Russia, France, South Africa, Egypt, Slovakia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Poland, Belarus |
Recommendations
Better regulation of legal manufacture and trading in arms
Legal trading should be a responsibility of and regulated by a newly configured United Nations that is more representative of poor nations, as well as financially less dependent on countries that manufacture arms. Legal arms should be traded only for defence (article 51 of the UN charter) and must not worsen existing conflict, cause human rights violations, or impede development.
Much more regulation of arms manufacturing companies is needed, particularly for companies that have overseas factories. The middlemen (brokers trading outside their own countries) who buy, sell, and transport arms to countries without adequate governance are most important. In parallel, tighter international regulation is needed of shipping agents and money launderers (including many reputable banks) who remain above the law by sidestepping the current weak controls. In many respects it would be better to make all brokering activities illegal (as they are with the drugs trade) and permit dealing of arms only through the UN. Brokers and company owners should be indicted for war crimes if they break international embargoes or provide arms illegally through negligence or intent. In addition, loans for the purchase of weapons by poor countries should be subject to UN approval.
The UN must do more to influence the United States, a country that exports the greatest number of weapons,w50-w54 refuses to accept an international criminal court,w55 and is one of only two states refusing to ratify the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.w56 Regrettably, in 2001, the US undersecretary of state at the first UN conference on small arms insisted that only illegal trading should be addressed and that the United States would resist any agreement that infringed the “right to bear arms.”w57
Transparency is also important.w58 Only seven of the world's 190 countries publish regular data on small arms exports, and only three of these provide details on the numbers and kinds of weapons involved.w59 All weapons and ammunition should be branded to enable tracing.
Important steps forward have been taken. Attempts to develop an ethical foreign policy in the United Kingdom have resulted in annual reports of licences granted for the exports of weapons, including small arms.w60 In 1998 an EU code of conduct on arms exports was agreed,w61 as well as a moratorium by the Economic Community of West African States on imports, exports, and manufacture of small arms and light weapons into west Africa.w62 An innovative proposal for controlling arms, “the international code of conduct,” has come from a commission of Nobel peace laureates and is based on ethical criteria within international humanitarian law.w63
Economic arguments in the United Kingdom have revealed the cost of the arms trade to taxpayers.w64 w65 The British government has also supported economic regeneration in Bulgaria and Ukraine,w66 countries dependent on the arms industry. However, links between the trade in arms and commodities such as oil mean that for powerful arms exporting countries the resulting economic advantages in terms of all trade are complex and probably substantial.
Programmes of weapons collection and destruction intended to demilitarise countries have included food, medical care, and education for individuals or communities that surrender weapons.w67 Perhaps the country that has provided the weapons should provide the compensation.
Better prevention of illegal manufacture and trading in arms
International laws and their aggressive enforcement should stop illegal arms trading, including its support systems, such as money laundering and smuggling. An international police force (perhaps better termed an international family protection force) working closely with national police is needed to arrest and charge the hundreds of criminally active illegal arms dealers, most of whom are already known and on databases.w18 Banks and companies supporting illegal trading should be targeted. Enhanced control of borders to detain aircraft, ships, or vehicles and arrest and charge people responsible for smuggling would have an impact. Many illegal arms dealers are based in rich, relatively well governed countries, so stopping them should be possible.
Investigations by the UN into breaches of arms embargoes often result in information about the state and individual actors involved and lead to expressions of concern but no action. No one has been convicted of violating UN arms embargoes.w18 The UN seems to be powerless to act, and it clearly needs to find a way of mobilising states to accept an international family protection force as well as giving more power to the international criminal court.w68 Tragically, trafficking of arms to Africa seems to be low on the world's priority list.w8 One possible way forward could involve the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime,w69 within which is a draft protocol against the illicit manufacture of and trafficking in firearms.
Conclusion
The real question raised by the above analysis is whether powerful arms trading countries want to address the problems they are causing. Children and mothers in poor countries seem to be regarded as much too unimportant and expendable. Somehow the UN has to find a way of creating a system that ethically regulates legal arms trading, and the international community needs to establish a protection force to address illegal trading.
Supplementary Material
Figure.
CHILD ADVOCACY INTERNATIONAL
Displaced, orphaned, malnourished, ill, or killed—the consequences of the arms trade
Acknowledgments
We thank J Saunders, policy adviser on conflict, Oxfam, and the Campaign against the Arms Trade (www.caat.org.uk) for their advice. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the two authors and not the organisations to which they are affiliated.
Footnotes
Competing interests: The aid agency Child Advocacy International might benefit from the publication of this paper.
References and a supplementary analysis are on bmj.com
Associated Data
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