AK-47: world's worst regulated weapon according to new report
New report from Control Arms campaign: Amnesty International, Oxfam International, and the International Action Network
on Small Arms (IANSA)
The Kalashnikov assault rifle will remain the most widely-used weapon in conflict zones for at least the next 20 years
because it is so poorly regulated, according to a new report by the Control Arms campaign released at the start of the
UN world conference on small arms and light weapons in New York today (26 June).
The Kalashnikov is manufactured in more countries and is being used to cause more widespread suffering today than at any
time in its sixty-year history. Many thousands of people are killed every year by the weapon. This is because there is
little international control on its production, sale and use, according to the report, AK-47: The World's Favourite
Killing Machine.
The report estimates that there are up to 100 million AK-47s and variations of its design in the world today. They are
found in the state arsenal of at least 82 countries and are produced in at least 14 countries. This is set to increase
with Venezuela recently signing a deal for the local assembly of the weapons, the first of its kind in the Americas.
The large number of production facilities throughout the world, the widespread availability of surplus Kalashnikovs and
the absence of global standards and laws to regulate their transfer make it easy for the weapons to fall into the hands
of unscrupulous arms brokers, armed militia and criminals.
Even the weapon's inventor, Lieutenant-General Mikhail Kalashnikov, is calling for tougher controls and, in a statement
released to the Control Arms campaign today, said:
"Because of the lack of international control over arms sales, small arms easily find their way to anywhere in the world
to be used not only for national defence, but by aggressors, terrorists and all kinds of criminals […] When I watch TV
and see small arms of the AK family in the hands of bandits, I keep asking myself: how did those people get hold of
them?"
Control Arms campaigners will today hand over the world's largest visual petition, the Million Faces Petition, to the UN
Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, in New York. The petition is calling for tougher arms controls and contains the images of
one million people in over 160 countries. The number symbolises the one million people who have been killed by small
arms since the Control Arms Campaign began in 2003.
"Out of control and unregulated, AK-47s have been used to murder and maim, fuelling conflict and poverty in the world's
poorest countries. One million people from around the world have signed the petition calling for tougher arms control.
At this UN world conference, governments must agree global rules for small arms sales and help put an end to this
suffering," said Jeremy Hobbs, Director, Oxfam International.
The widespread availability of the AK-47and its variants is a legacy of the Cold War. Its production was originally
promoted by the Russian government amongst its allies but there was little control on the production agreements and in
some cases there was no production agreement at all. Millions of AK-47s were also supplied to various regimes during the
period and these are still in circulation, now being traded by numerous firms and governments across the globe.
"The AK-47 is a symbol of the way in which the arms trade has run amok, destroying lives and livelihoods. Only global
rules to control who produces the weapons and to whom they are sold will ensure that they don't fall into the wrong
hands," said Irene Khan, Secretary General of Amnesty International.
"The uncontrolled proliferation of the AK-47, like other guns and light weapons, has led to millions of deaths and
massive suffering, particularly in some of the poorest parts of the world. It will be five years until the next global
small arms meeting. If governments don't take this opportunity to prevent guns falling into the wrong hands, another 1.8
million people will die at gunpoint before there is another chance to take action," said Rebecca Peters, Director of IANSA.