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NORTH KOREA PROMISES IT WILL DISMANTLE ITS NUCLEAR WEAPONS PROGRAM
KIM YONG NAM, NATION'S 2ND TOP OFFICIAL, SAYS NORTH WILL MOVE FOR A NUCLEAR-FREE KOREAN PENINSULA 1 March 2007 Amid skepticism as 6-nation talks to resume, in negotiations with the South, North Korea's authoritarian regime has renewed its promise to dismantle its nuclear weapons program. The AP reports "Kim Yong Nam said 'the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula is the dying wish' of the country's founding president, Kim Il Sung, the father of current leader Kim Jong Il".
UN SMALL ARMS CONFERENCE SEEKS GLOBAL REGULATIONS The United Nations conference on light weapons proliferation is facing a burgeoning black market trade which spreads new and used small arms around the globe, fueling civil wars and organized crime. Recent months have seen a number of reports urging governments to tackle the problem; in May, the rights group Amnesty International reported the illicit trade was "out of control", fueled by an "opaque chain" of private interests. [Full Story] UGANDA TO DESTROY 57,000 WEAPONS The nation of Uganda is taking important steps toward reducing the risk of regional arms poliferation, by destroying a stockpile of old and out-of-use weapons and weapons seized from illegal sources. The move is part of Uganda's pledge to the 2004 Nairobi Protocol, which required signatory nations of Africa's Great Lakes region to reduce the threat of proliferation of light arms across borders, to the peril of civilian populations and political stability. [Full Story] AMNESTY REPORTS INTERNATIONAL ARMS TRADE 'OUT OF CONTROL' Amnesty International has published a new report examining the international arms trade, and its findings indicate there is little control on the expanding web of private interests seeking to profit from a proliferation of dangerous weapons. The report also illustrates the ways in which this scattering of dangerous weapons has lead to severe human rights abuses. [Full Story] 'TREE OF LIFE' MAKES USED WEAPONS INTO SIGN OF HOPE In the wake of Mozambique's long civil war, lasting from 1976 to 1992, a group of artists set up the Transforming Arms into Tools project in the nation's capital, Maputo. Sculptors use decomissioned weapons, and parts of weapons to make art, expressing the possibility of finding new ways to secure and advance civil society. [Full Story] |
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