Americans own nearly half world's guns in civilian hands: survey

Gun Such accidents are not rare in the United States, where the debate on gun control rages on | Reuters

Americans make up four per cent of the world’s population but owned about 46 per cent of the estimated 857 million weapons in civilian hands at the end of 2017, a survey showed on Monday.

The Small Arms Survey, an independent global research project based in Geneva, Switzerland, found that there were more than one billion firearms in the world, of which civilians owned 85 per cent, while the rest were held by militaries or law enforcement agencies.

The number of guns owned by civilians globally rose to 857 million in 2017 from 650 million in 2006, the survey said. There were 120 guns for every 100 US residents in 2017, it found, followed by Yemen with nearly 53 firearms per 100 people.

“The biggest force pushing up gun ownership around the world is civilian ownership in the United States. Ordinary American people buy approximately 14 million new and imported guns every year,” survey author Aaron Karp told reporters.

“Why are they buying them? That’s another debate. Above all, they are buying them probably because they can. The American market is extraordinarily permissive,” he told a news conference at the United Nations in New York.

The Small Arms Survey said civilian firearms registration data was available for 133 countries and territories, but only 28 countries released information on their military stockpiles and law enforcement agencies.

Karp said every figure published by the survey for 230 countries and territories “includes some degree of estimation.”  

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