T H EL I B E R T A R I A NE N T E R P R I S E
I s s u e
68
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L. Neil Smith's THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
Number 68, March 31, 2000
March Madness
Gun Controllers Land in Africa
by Andrew Muriithi
[email protected]
Special to TLE
For a long time I had known that the gun control debate was not
confined to the United States alone. I had read about gun bans in
Britain and Australia and the efforts of the HCI-equivalent in South
Africa, Gun Free South Africa, to achieve the same in that country.
But for the first time, under the aegis of the United Nations, the
international gun controllers have landed in East Africa. At this
moment, the East Africa and Great Lakes Conference on the
Proliferation of Small Arms is being held at the Kenya School of
Monetary Studies in Nairobi, the capitol of Kenya. The conference is
jointly funded by the Kenya Government and the governments of the
United Kingdom, Canada, Norway, Denmark, Finland and Sweden. It has
drawn participants from Rwanda, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Eritrea, Sudan, Ethiopia, Burundi and Djibouti. The Nairobi
Initiative is the first to specifically target East Africa and the
Great Lakes region. According to press reports, the UN has also
organized other anti-gun initiatives including the US-EU common
principles on small arms and light weapons, the Latin American
Countries Initiative and the Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS) Moratorium.
In an opening address delivered to the four-day conference on Sunday,
March 12, 2000, Kenyan Foreign Minister Bonaya Godana said Africa has
over 100 million illegal firearms, especially in the Great Lakes
region and the Horn of Africa, both politically volatile hotspots.
Godana said according to UN estimates, illicit small arms trade is
believed to account for almost half of the total volume of
international transfers in small arms and light weapons. "These arms
filter far beyond armies and police forces to irresponsible groups,
criminal organisations, private security forces, vigilante squads and
individual citizens", said Godana. [It is interesting to note how
individual citizens are juxtaposed to vigilante squads, criminal
organizations and "irresponsible groups."] On Monday, March 13,
Francis Muthaura, the chairman of the secretariat of the East African
Community, the newly revived economic bloc including Kenya, Uganda
and Tanzania, announced the formation of a security committee to deal
with the proliferation of arms in the region. He said the flow of
illegal arms into the region has contributed to the rising rate of
violent crimes and conflicts.
There is no doubt that worldwide, there is a deep hostility toward
civilian firearms ownership. In Africa, civilian gun ownership is a
sparse tradition, limited mostly to European communities in southern
Africa where frontier colonist attitudes still endure. Following the
election victory of the marxist African National Congress in 1994 and
the party's almost total parliamentary sweep four years later, gun
ownership in South Africa is under greater threat than ever. The
crime explosion in that country adds fuel to the anti-gun sentiment.
In East Africa, the situation is different. British colonial rule in
the late 19th Century and the early 20th Century forbid ownership of
alcohol and firearms by Africans. The first armed African rebellion
against British rule erupted in 1952 when the world-renown Mau Mau
militia began a guerilla campaign against British administrative
posts and farms in the so-called White Highlands in Central Kenya,
powering their campaign with firearms stolen from British armories
and manufactured at home. The colonies of Uganda, Tanganyika and
Kenya, in that order, all attained independence within one year of
one another, with Kenya being the last East African country to do so
in 1963. The Mau Mau campaign was widely believed to have accelerated
British acquiescence to demands for African independence, at a time
when the Colonial Office in London would have delayed autonomy to as
late as 1975.
Upon attaining independence, the newly independent African
governments maintained the strict colonial firearms laws, thwarting
the opportunity for firearms ownership to become a guaranteed right
of citizenship. The Kenya Constitution, for example, was negotiated
at a series of conferences between African nationalists and the
colonial government at Lancaster House in London. Hence, following
the pattern of British law and institutions, a definite
constitutional theme for freedom and liberty failed to be articulated
in the document. A weak Bill of Rights was included that gave the new
government power to suspend or sanction it. This was the general
sequence of events in East Africa and the Great Lakes, and as a
result, the expansion of tyrannical regimes was inevitable. The
Rwanda genocide, the Sudan and Somalia conflicts are symptomatic. So
far, only Somalia has managed to completely dismantle the central
state. Contrary to international press reports, Mogadishu is probably
one of the safest cities in Eastern Africa due to the high rate of
civilian gun ownership. Somalis have for the most part rejected
attempts by warlords and their UN sponsors to reinstitute the
governmental structure that was responsible for the breakout of civil
war.
Needless to mention, the governmental attitude toward civilian
firearms ownership in East Africa has been draconian, with strict
licensing procedures that only benefit the ruling class, law
enforcement, the military, politically-connected businessmen and
wealthy personalities. But perhaps more importantly, social attitudes
are decidedly against gun ownership. Most citizens in these countries
have an irrational fear of firearms due to a lack of exposure to them
or training in how to use them. The colonial legacy of gun
proscription has created a disconnect between responsible civilian
ownership and personal security and political freedom. Governments
have taken advantage of a lack of knowledge and tradition to stamp
out civilian gun ownership.
Kenya today is facing a crime explosion akin to that which has taken
place in South Africa. Violent robberies, carjackings, rape and
murder have rocked not only the capitol, but also rural regions
previously thought to be outside the reaches of sophisticated crime.
Criminals are highly equipped, employing high capacity Uzis and
AK-47s imported from hotspots like Somalia and southern Sudan.
Despite government decree outlawing weapons, arms traffic has not
been stemmed and loss of life and property continues. However,
law-abiding citizens may be wising up, and for the first time, Kenya
is witnessing civil disobedience with regard to gun ownership. In
parts of the Rift Valley province where random banditry and
cattle-rustling, believed to be state-inspired under internecine
pretext, is prevalent, whole villages are communally purchasing
high-powered firearms and arming civilian militias for their common
defense. The Kenyan government, under presidential leadership, has
threatened martial measures to disarm civilians after firearms
amnesties have met successive failure. In the main urban centers,
such civilian action has not been documented, perhaps because of the
proximity to the seat of government, but it is widely known that a
large firearms black market exists especially in the capitol Nairobi,
where metropolitan crime is most concentrated. It is against this
backdrop that the UN Small Arms Conference is taking place.
Americans should really thank their lucky stars that the right to
keep and bear arms is a well-established political doctrine. It is
extremely disturbing that the country is going the way of Europe and
the rest of the world. Random shooting incidents continue to make
political hay for the anti-gun politicians and groups, while
well-established Second Amendment groups like the National Rifle
Association buckle under pressure to introduce further strictures on
gun ownership. Second Amendment champions should see the gun control
agenda in an international context in the manner that the Founding
Fathers did. Such perspective is invaluable if true freedom is to
continue ringing in the United States.
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