Brazil maps gun trade, urges international controls
July 28, 2000
Web posted at: 7:24 PM EDT (2324 GMT)


RIO DE JANEIRO, July 28 (Reuters) -- Brazilian researchers
on Friday published a study mapping an international gun
trade that is turning Rio de Janeiro slums into a war zone. 

The Research Institute of Religious Studies (ISER), in
conjunction with police and Viva Rio anti-violence
activists, traced the origin of more than 44,000
confiscated arms in the hope that other countries will
help bring a stop to the deadly trade. 

"In 1999 alone, 10,000 guns were seized, marking a new
record," said Rubem Cesar Fernandes, president of Viva
Rio and executive director of the study. "What we want
to do is talk to the countries that are supplying them." 

The guns are mostly used by Rio's notorious drug gangs
who work out of hillside shantytowns. They help make Rio
one of the most dangerous city's in Latin America with a
homicide rate more than twice as high as New York's peak
1990 murder rate. 

Ironically, Brazilian gun manufacturers are the biggest
culprits in the guns trade, researchers showed. They
churned out more than 80 percent of the arms that have
been seized by police, followed by the United States,
Argentina and Spain. 

But while activists are fighting to pass a law making
gun sales in Brazil illegal, they also hope to deter
international suppliers from stepping in to fill the
void. 

"We have information that Brazilian arms are being
substituted by Spanish, Italian, Austrian and Israeli
guns," Fernandes said. 

They are urging the countries listed in the study to
help track the trade by determining how the guns
arrived in Brazil. 

But perhaps more importantly, they are asking other
nations to suspend sales to neighboring Paraguay - a
black market paradise that is suspected of providing
a huge number of guns to Rio. 

The United States halted sales to Paraguay in 1997
and even Brazil stopped sales on suspicion that its
own guns were legally exported and then illegally
brought back into the country. 

"We know that Paraguay is an important channel for
guns that end up in the shantytowns," said Ignacio
Cano, a researcher at ISER and executive coordinator
of the study. 

Earlier this week, Paraguayan military officials shut
down an arms importing firm that had been linked to
105 Brazilian-made Taurus pistols that were seized as
part of a major drug bust at the beginning of the month
in Rio. 

The study will be sent to the countries that have
provided arms.


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