Trafficking deepens fears of insecurity'
April 01 2007 at 11:15AM
By Lucie Peyterman
Nairobi - A rise in illegal arms trafficking has deepened insecurity fears in Kenya, already struggling to overcome its image as a crime-ridden country plagued by terrorism threats.
Once considered a relative island of stability amid regional conflicts in the Great Lakes and Horn of Africa, Kenya has suffered deadly terrorist attacks, in 1998 and 2002, ongoing tribal conflicts and a crime wave that claimed 50 lives in January alone.
Estimates of the number of illegal weapons in circulation - easily procured in the city's open air markets - range well above the 100 000 mark, despite a government initiative launched last year to curb the availability of arms.
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"There are around 140 000 illegal arms in circulation in Kenya and they are found among the most vulnerable and marginalised groups," Daniel Kiptugen of Oxfam said.
In a step to fight the spread of firearms, Kenya's security minister, John Michuki, recently took part in a ceremony to destroy about 8 000 illegal arms seized over the past year.
Standing in front of a pile of burning guns, Michuki said the weapons were "fuelling the illegal exploitation of natural resources and abetting terrorism and other crimes.
"The very easy availability, affordability and accessibility of arms reduces the incentives to find non-violent solutions to conflicts and breeds a spiral of insecurity," Michuki said.
Police say conflicts along the east African country's borders, including a two-decade insurgency in Uganda, chaotic anarchy in Somalia since 1991 and the former civil war in Sudan - have led to an increased number of weapons in the area.
"There's always been serious arms trafficking in Kenya but we also have a problem because of Somalia" where arms are sold freely, police spokesperson Gideon Kibunjah said.
Weapons smuggling has increased since Ethiopian-Somali troops drove out an Islamist movement from south and central Somalia three months ago, plunging Mogadishu into chaos and making arms control at the border with Kenya an issue of little priority, Kibunjah has said.
Kenya, party since 2000 to a regional treaty to control and reduce the number of illegal arms in the Great Lakes and Horn of Africa, has achieved little success with its disarmament programmes, despite much-publicised weapon destructions.
"The forced disarmament process has never worked because we must address what drives the demand in the first place: competition for natural resources and a lack of government security forces," Oxfam's Kiptugen said.
Tribal conflicts over access to water and land among pastoral communities in Kenya's north are often resolved by gun battles, in which communities see gun use "as a way to protect themselves and their livelihoods," he explained.
A deepening divide between the rich and the poor in Kenya, where two-thirds of the population lives on less than one dollar a day, also exacerbates the problem, gun control activist Walter Odhiambo said.
"This inequity is a catalyst for violence," he said.
A gun-fed crime wave in Kenya earlier this year led the United States to issue a travel advisory to its citizens, warning of "increasing incidents of violent crime" after two Americans were shot dead in January.
While the government increases its promises to step up security measures as President Mwai Kibaki comes up for re-election in December, much remains to be done to alleviate fears.
"The impact (of these programmes) is yet to be felt," Kiptugen said. - Sapa-AFP