A non-profit lobbying organization that aims to preserve and defend
the Second Amendment says the U.N. Arms Trade Treaty currently under
debate is "extremely dangerous."
The
United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs says many governments
have voiced concerns about "the absence of globally agreed rules for all
countries to guide their decision on arms transfers" -- thus the
negotiations on an arms trade treaty. "A robust arms trade treaty can
make a difference for millions of people confronted with insecurity,
deprivation and fear," states the website for treaty conference.
Erich Pratt of Gun Owners of America
(GOA) sees the treaty quite differently. "We think this treaty is
extremely dangerous -- not only to our American sovereignty but to the
Second Amendment," he tells OneNewsNow. "Registering gun owners and
their firearms is one of the key threats in this treaty."
Proponents of the treaty say it is about controlling international gun trafficking. Pratt's reaction?
"When
you listen to the official delegates at these conferences, you see that
what they're really after is our firearms," says the GOA spokesman. "In
fact, that was stated very clearly by the Mexico delegate this month
during one of the sessions. He said that individual rights, like our
Second Amendment freedoms, are not a reason to keep them from imposing
restrictions upon those rights."
Organizations like Amnesty International USA claim this treaty
would rein in unregulated weapons that they say kill an estimated 1,500
people a day globally. Still, Pratt says that is not the fault of the
tens of thousands of responsible gun owners.
READ MORE
No comments:
Post a Comment