Illegal gun trade has created a “black market” for the sale of firearms in the Caribbean. That “black market”, he said, has led to many of the gun-related crimes that are impacting The Bahamas and other Caribbean countries, signaling the need for continued cooperation.
Turnquest Bahamas Minister of National Security,
Tommy Turnquest said the “crackdown” on illegal firearms sales and smuggling operations within The Bahamas and the wider Caribbean is part of efforts aimed at reducing the amount of gun-related violent crime and criminality impacting the region.
Delivering the keynote address at the opening session of the CARICOM-US Partnership to Combat Illicit Trafficking in Arms Seminar, in Nassau, Turnquest said the arms “black market” makes it possible for drug traffickers, gangs, migrant smugglers, terrorists and other criminal elements – including organized crime – to gain access to dangerous weapons “which increases the prospects of creating mayhem in our countries and our region.”
He said evidence shows that, in some instances, the illegal trafficking of small arms, light weapons and ammunition is merging with other “illicit trafficking phenomenon” such as illegal migrant trafficking and the illegal drug trade, to form a single criminal enterprise.
“Such criminal enterprises are engaging persons across national borders in much the same way that legitimate multi-national businesses do, bringing serious distortion to the concept of globalization,” Turnquest said.
“Whether arms in such enterprises are exchanged for money or for drugs, or are used to protect illicit shipments of persons or commit murders, assaults, robberies and other crimes; to intimidate and threaten and to enhance status, or other reasons, they contribute to the widespread availability of firearms in the region.
“Our efforts to combat the transnational phenomenon of illicit arms trafficking should therefore, extend beyond our own national efforts to encompass not only countries in the region, but other countries as well,” Turnquest added.
Turnquest said the trafficking in illicit firearms in the Caribbean speaks “volumes” about the region’s “recognized vulnerability” to the problem of illicit trafficking, due to its location between the air and sea routes of Central and South America and North America and Europe.
The National Security Minister said the availability of small arms and some types of automatic weapons in Caribbean countries magnifies the need for cooperation on gun control between Caribbean countries, regional and international law enforcement agencies and the gun manufacturing countries of the world.
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