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Summary: There are ‘too many guns in our society,’ say young people across the Middle East region according to a new report published today by the Middle East North Africa Network on Small Arms (MENAANSA).
“While the threat of, or actual ongoing conflict and occupation continue to trigger community insecurity, the intensity of demand for weapons is also heavily conditioned by the quality of local governance and socio-economic environments in the studied communities.” said MENAANSA’s Regional Coordinator, Dr. Eizadin Al Asbahy. The new study lifts up the voices of ordinary young Arabs on how they experience human insecurity, what they see as their community security priorities and how they may choose to improve conditions for community security. Each of the communities studied (Northern Gaza, Ramallah, Southern Lebanon, Bekaa district, and Beirut, Al Haj Yousif district, Khartoum), is either in conflict or, at serious risk of conflict and where small arms and light weapons are a serious contributing factor to this conflict. It is not the objective of the network and publication to challenge concepts of political resistance and historical or tribal customs in the region. “We focused on community perspectives because we believe that members of communities facing security issues are often best qualified to provide solutions that will address their human security needs. Politicians, community level decision-makers and analysts need to develop approaches to security, together with communities and their leaders, and these approaches must consider and address the needs of all people living there.” said MENAANSA’s Regional Coordinator, Dr. Eizadin Al Asbahy.
The participants’ responses in all four of the communities studied suggest that one of the major factors driving demand for guns is mistrust of governments’ ability to ensure security.