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The global proliferation of small arms and light weapons (guns) represents an epidemic which should be addressed as urgently as avian flu, according to a new report released today by the International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA). The report 2006: Bringing the Global Gun Crisis Under Control sets out the scale of the small arms threat which affects every country in the world and results in the deaths of 1000 people a day. With 640 million guns already in the world and eight million new ones produced each year, there are enough weapons to equip one in every ten people on the planet. Of these, the majority are in the hands of civilians (59 per cent), outnumbering those held by the armed forces and governments (38 per cent). 10-14 billion rounds of ammunition are produced annually, sufficient to shoot every person in the world twice. Rebecca Peters, Director of IANSA said, “Guns kill, wound and disable around a million people a year. If 1000 people a day were dying of avian flu you can be certain something would be done about it. This is an epidemic which demands immediate international action.” The source of the illicit market is the legal trade, often in a different country from the one where the weapons are used in violence. The vast majority of small arms and light weapons – ranging from revolvers and machine guns to anti-aircraft missiles and rocket propelled grenade launchers – are manufactured, traded and initially owned legally; many later fall into illegal ownership. Unlike heavy weaponry such as tanks, small arms are easy to use, transport and carry across borders and are hard for governments to monitor. It is clear that this problem must be regulated in a manner that is comprehensive, coordinated and global. Despite this, there are: Although the gun epidemic continues unabated, the international community has failed to address it as a crisis. The United Nations held its first major meeting on the issue just five years ago, and the second one will be this June. Whilst urgent action is clearly indicated, there are fears that the meeting will simply re-run its previous, five year old discussions and miss the opportunity to move forward. Rebecca Peters: “Around the world many governments are now reforming their own domestic legislation to deal with the scourge of guns. When those governments turn up at the UN in June, they must stand up for what they know to be right at the global level: the international arms trade must be brought under control. No excuses – not national security, not local culture or custom, not economics will justify a failure to act decisively. Waiting a further five years means consigning a further 1.8 million people to violent death and millions more to serious injury. The IANSA report indicates four key areas for action: Guns are spread across the entire world with an estimated: No region of the world can claim to be exempt from this problem and only a genuinely global response to it will address the crisis. Gun violence is a preventable problem, far more so than many diseases, but requires a globally coordinated response and political will. If the UN fails to take such action this year, it will be at least another five years before they meet to discuss it again.