The Ploughshares Monitor
September 2000, volume 21, no. 3
Churches
of Latin America say Ano@
to
guns
The following is the statement of the
"Ecumenical Consultation on Small Arms in Latin America,"
which was sponsored by the World Council of Churches in collaboration
with the Latin American Council of Churches and in partnership with
Viva Rio of Rio de Janeiro, and held July 25-28, 2000, in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil. The consultation was designed to engage the churches
of Latin America in international civil society programs to address
the global small arms problem and to prepare for the 2001 UN Conference
on Small Arms.
The Latin American ecumenical consultation
on small arms calls on churches to renew their commitment to addressing,
as a matter of urgency, the problems of violence in Latin American
society and, in particular, to addressing issues of armed violence
and the diffusion and misuse of small arms in their societies.
The meeting, involving representatives
of churches throughout Latin America, as well as representatives
of the international church and civil society in Latin America and
beyond, noted with gratitude the increased international attention
to the global small arms problem. Participants called on the international
community, including governments, civil society, and churches, to
also address the conditions that lead to violence, especially the
global diffusion of small arms and light weapons. Participants pledged
to work within local, national, regional and international contexts,
ecumenically and in cooperation with other elements of civil society,
to build awareness of the United Nations Conference on Small Arms
in 2001 and to promote measures designed to advance international
commitment and cooperation toward the effective control of firearms,
small arms, and light weapons.
The meeting was organized by the World
Council of Churches (WCC) in cooperation with the Latin American
Council of Churches (CLAI) and Viva Rio, a local NGO, as part of
their joint effort to give priority to issues of micro-disarmament
within the context of the Decade to Overcome Violence: Churches
Seeking Reconciliation and Peace (2001-2010) and to facilitate and
encourage the churches' ongoing attention to the small arms problem.
Participants noted with appreciation the leadership of the World
Council of Churches in the efforts of international civil society
to curb the supply and misuse of small arms and to reinvigorate
efforts to build the kinds of social, economic, and political conditions
conducive to sustainable human security and to reducing the demand
for small arms.
The consultation welcomed the Antigua
Declaration of June 29, 2000 on the proliferation of light weapons
in Central America and commends it, including the policy recommendations,
to governments and civil society throughout Latin America. Churches
are encouraged to refer to the Antigua Declaration in the context
of developing policy proposals relevant to the 2001 UN Conference.
Small Arms and violence in the Latin American context
The consultation heard from scholars
and researchers from all of the subregions of Latin America (the
Southern Cone, the Andean sub-region, and Central America and Mexico).
The information and analyses presented on small arms issues in Latin
America indicate the profoundly disturbing presence, spread, and
impact of armed violence in Latin American societies. Small arms
diffusion affects regional and sub-regional stability as well as
national crime rates. Latin America, the gathering was told, is
burdened with extraordinarily high rates of homicide by international
standards. As one participant put it, "Crimes that once shocked
us are now only statistics."
While parts of the region, notably Colombia,
have high rates of crime that are closely linked to entrenched political
conflict, in Latin America generally the small arms problem is very
closely linked to, and manifested in, drug trafficking, other crimes,
and desperate local social and economic conditions.
Arms production facilities within the
region contribute to the diffusion of small arms and, in addition,
the region has a legacy of large stocks of weapons, accumulated
during the Cold War period, which now circulate within countries
and throughout the region. Peace agreements in Central America for
the most part failed to make effective provision for the collection
of surplus guns, and the current lack of coordination of national
gun control policies means that illicit trafficking is widespread.
The consultation addressed the wide variety
of factors that contribute to current high levels of armed violence,
noting particularly the process of rapid urbanization as well as
social and economic marginalization. Economic inequality in and
exclusion from the international economy are also significant in
producing the desperate social and economic conditions in urban
communities that provoke a demand for guns in Latin America.
While the demand for small arms is generated
through a broad range of social, economic, and political circumstances,
it is in local communities that it finds its most immediate expression
B on the streets of urban slums, where guns are all too often viewed
as a personal solution to endemic and systemic social and economic
disintegration. The consultation emphasized that in Latin America,
as elsewhere, the reduction of armed violence and especially the
reduction of the availability of guns requires a reduction in the
demand for guns, which in turn requires real social and economic
transformation, in local communities and beyond.
Responding to the small arms crisis
An effective response to the small arms
crisis in Latin America must begin with a two-fold acknowledgment:
first, that the crisis exists and that, while it has complex roots,
it has deep local manifestations that must be addressed at the local
level; and, second, that effective attention to the problem at the
local level is aided by international initiatives designed to address
the small arms problem at a global level.
The consultation noted that while the
solutions must be local, attempts to forge international norms and
standards for restricting weapons transfers, possession, and use
are essential to setting a constructive context for local efforts.
Thus the consultation welcomed in particular the adoption by the
Organization of American States (OAS) in 1997 of the Inter-American
Convention against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking
in Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives, and other Related Materials.
The convention commits states in the region to introduce a wide
range of gun-control measures and to pursue regional cooperation
toward more effective controls on the transfer, possession, and
use of small arms.
Similarly, the consultation welcomed
current efforts to broaden and extend key provisions of the OAS
convention through negotiations within the United Nations towards
a Protocol against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking
in Firearms, Their Parts and Components and Ammunition, supplementing
the United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime.
Once agreed, this Firearms Protocol will establish common international
standards and promote international cooperation in their application
with regard to weapons transfers. As such, it will facilitate more
effective tracing of firearms.
The consultation also welcomed the forthcoming
(in 2001) United Nations Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small
Arms and Light Weapons in all its Aspects. This conference promises
to be a major opportunity for the international community to further
advance international norms and standards for effective control
on the transfer, possession, and use of firearms.
The consultation endorsed the initiative
of the Nobel peace laureates to promote an International Code of
Conduct on international arms transfers as a key element in the
effort to restrict weapons flows and to encourage and establish
international norms and standards against firearms possession and
use.
In welcoming these international initiatives
as well as initiatives in other regions, the consultation affirmed
the importance of encouraging international values and norms in
support of the effective control of small arms, and called for the
prominent engagement of civil society and especially the churches
in efforts to support and strengthen these initiatives. The churches
in Latin America are urged to encourage their governments to ratify
and implement the OAS convention, to support negotiations on the
UN Protocol to promote the most effective controls possible, and
to participate in the 2001 conference.
The consultation emphasized that, despite
welcome regional and international efforts, much more needs to be
done to implement genuine hemispheric cooperation in support of
gun control. Policy coordination in response to the small arms crisis
has lagged far behind economic coordination and integration in the
region.
The consultation identified a range of
additional policy measures that should be taken by governments within
regional and national contexts. Three sub-regional working groups
developed policy measures relevant to each of the sub-regions, with
the Southern Cone group paying particular attention to legislative
measures, including current efforts to ban the possession and commerce
of firearms in Brazil, as well as the need to strengthen inter-state
cooperation in law enforcement measures on the sub-regional level
within the Mercosur integration context. The Central American
group focused on public education and advocacy measures, while the
Andean group addressed national policy and legislative issues as
well as public awareness-raising programs.
Prominent among the measures discussed
is the need for reform of security sectors. The consultation expressed
concern about the "re-militarization" and the "para-militarization"
of security and security forces. Of particular concern is rapid
growth in the use of private security firms, with serious implications
for national sovereignty in some instances, and with far-reaching
consequences for states' and citizens' full enjoyment of natural
resources, human rights, and self-determination. The consultation
called for the reassertion of publicly accountable security institutions
under the direct authority of states. In addition, states are called
on to address problems of corruption within police forces, and to
encourage the modernization of police training and procedures, including
the establishment of special units within police forces to deal
more effectively with domestic and family violence.
While the consultation acknowledged that
addressing the root causes of the social and micro-conflicts that
generate the demand for firearms in Latin American societies is
a slow and arduous process, it recognized that such efforts are
necessary and central to effective and long-term firearms control
and to the reduction of armed violence. At the same time, the pursuit
of gun control cannot wait until entrenched social and economic
problems are successfully dealt with. Gun control must be pursued
immediately and urgently, even in the context of ongoing social
and economic disintegration. Indeed, the consultation asserted that
measures to control firearms are themselves important for social
reconstruction and creating cultures of peace.
The consultation urged that in all measures
to control firearms and promote social and economic conditions conducive
to peaceful communities, human security values, community empowerment,
mechanisms for the peaceful resolution of conflict, and post-conflict
peace-building must become central strategies and commitments.
The role of churches
The problem of armed violence and the
diffusion of small arms in Latin America cannot be effectively addressed
without the involvement of the churches of the region. The consultation
encouraged the churches to acknowledge their responsibility to engage
directly in public policy dialogue and advocacy. In that engagement
the church must also work with other sectors of society. Churches
have a special responsibility to bring central moral and ethical
perspectives to bear on the social and political pursuit of microdisarmament.
In the course of addressing issues of
armed violence, peace-building must become a central, active, and
strategic focus of the mission of the church. And within that mission,
small arms control must be held up as an urgent objective requiring
the active witness of the church.
The church was urged to train leaders
within the community to give prominence to small arms issue and
to build a broad capacity within the church to enable it to sustain
its presence both in policy development (at local, national, and
international levels) and in direct community action and peace-building.
The consultation pointed to the Decade
to Overcome Violence: Churches Seeking Reconciliation and Peace
(2001-2010) as providing the churches with an essential framework
for coordinated action, at local to international levels. In this
context, a broad range of church action was discussed and recommended.
Churches have deep roots in local communities
and thus are especially well positioned to address the issues of
micro-conflict. Churches know the people's needs, and can understand
the insecurities that lead some to seek security through guns. It
is important that the churches directly connect their work to communities'
needs, seeking to create gun-free zones in which the resolution
of conflicts can be more constructively pursued. The consultation
learned about the WCC "Peace to the City" Network, and
envisioned participation in networks of cities where churches are
active in addressing issues of armed violence and gun control.
The church has a calling to stand in
solidarity with persons and communities which are subject to ongoing
violence. Solidarity action includes the development of campaigns
that mobilize citizen participation and promote the entrenchment
of cultures of peace.
The churches are also well-positioned
to give leadership in efforts to raise awareness of the nature and
extent of the small arms problem and of the urgent need for gun
control measures. The gathering and dissemination of reliable information
is essential, and churches were encouraged to support research efforts
within civil society and the academic community, including research
on issues such as the magnitude of gun availability and the physical
and psychological consequences of gun proliferation. The consultation
emphasized the role of the media in shaping public knowledge and
attitudes and encouraged engagement with the media in explorations
of responsible media coverage of violence and small arms issues.
Churches belong to a major international
fellowship, and churches in Latin America are encouraged to become
part of the already initiated Ecumenical Network on Small Arms (ENSA).
ENSA links to the International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA)
and through these and other relationships, the churches of Latin
America are urged to work ecumenically and cooperatively with civil
society organizations and research institutions.
Consultation participants were moved
by the tragic realities of gun violence, and yet they concluded
the Rio meeting energized by the knowledge that their work to address
the small arms problem is carried out in the context of a growing
international community of concern and action. In summing up the
consultation's call for decisive and sustained church action, participants
decided the call could be boiled down to one clear assertion: "IT'S
TIME FOR THE CHURCHES TO SAY NO TO GUNS."
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