This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/africa/7038348.stm
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 2 | Version 3 |
---|---|
Wars in Africa wipe out aid gains | Wars in Africa wipe out aid gains |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A report on armed conflict in Africa has shown that the cost to the continent's development over a 15-year period was nearly $300bn (£146bn). | A report on armed conflict in Africa has shown that the cost to the continent's development over a 15-year period was nearly $300bn (£146bn). |
The research was undertaken by a number of non-governmental organisations, including Oxfam. | The research was undertaken by a number of non-governmental organisations, including Oxfam. |
It says the cost of conflict was equal to the amount of money received in aid during the same period. | It says the cost of conflict was equal to the amount of money received in aid during the same period. |
This is the first time analysts have calculated the overall effects of armed violence on development. | This is the first time analysts have calculated the overall effects of armed violence on development. |
The report says that between 1990 and 2005, 23 African nations were involved in conflict, and on average this cost African economies $18bn a year. | |
It concludes that African governments have taken encouraging steps at a regional level to control arms transfers, but that what is needed is a global, legally-binding arms trade treaty. | |
The president of Liberia, which is just starting to recover from a long civil war, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, also wrote the preface to the report. | |
She told the BBC "the proliferation of weapons is a key driver in armed conflicts". | |
"We need to restrict the supply of guns to African conflict zones - and an arms trade treaty is a vital way to do this", she said. | |
Ongoing burden | |
The BBC's Johannesburg correspondent Peter Biles says that some costs of war, such as increased military spending and a struggling economy continue long after the fighting has stopped. | |
Liberia's Defence Minister, Brownie Samukai told the BBC's Network Africa programme that to his knowledge expenditure this year alone included sums of $11m and $35m "for training, equipment, facilities, buildings and construction - a combination of these types of expenditure." | |
Does war make Africa poor? | Does war make Africa poor? |
The researchers say that although the number of armed conflicts is falling in Africa there is no room for complacency, with little hope of a swift settlement in either Sudan or Somalia. | |
And some experts argue that Africa actually needs to increase its arms spending. | |
Haneelmoed Heitman - the Africa correspondent for Jane's Defence - told the BBC "in a lot of countries the primary problem is that the national security forces are too small, too ill-equipped and too ill-trained to actually provide any sort of security". | |
He cites the example of Cameroon which has some 12,500 troops to cover around 400,000 sq kms with no transport or reconaissance aircraft. | |
"Without helicopters for tactical movement", says Mr Heitman, "it's physically impossible for them to deploy to counter banditry or insurgency". | |
He concludes that most African countries need to spend more on military equipment - but primarily on transport such as helicopters to allow them to mobilise to deploy against the "bad guys". |