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Gun law in Yemen

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Firearm ownership in Yemen is considered as right rather than privilege, and therefore is allowed without any license or permit. Carry is unrestricted in the country. Yemen is the second most armed country in the world after the United States. (128 guns for every 100 residents).[1]

History

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Up until the second half of the 20th century, Yemenis traditionally carried a jambiya dagger and using weapons was regulated by tribal laws. The flood of guns in the country led to the extinction of those traditions.[2] A new permissive gun culture replaced the code of honor and chivalry.[3]

In 1992 Yemeni government passed Law Regulating Carrying Firearms, Ammunition & their Trade. Article 9 of this law states that:[4]

The citizens of the Republic shall have the right to hold the necessary rifles, machine guns, revolvers, and hunting rifles for their personal use with an amount of ammunition for the purpose of legitimate defense.

The law did not specify, however, which authority would ensure the control of arms proliferation.[5]

In 2007, the government issued a decree banning weapons in major cities and limiting weapons carried by security personnel. In three years, 720,000 unlicensed weapons were confiscated, and hundreds of weapons shops were temporarily closed down. The Arab Spring broke this dynamic.[2][6]

After civil war began in 2015 various parts of the country were overrun by different factions. Since there is no centralized government to enforce gun laws all types of arms including rifles, fully-automatic firearms, anti-tank guide missiles or armored vehicles are being sold over the counter for various militias and individuals willing to buy them.[1]

In October 2018, the Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism released a study demonstrating many guns in Yemen were manufactured by European weapon makers.[7]

Carry

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Open carry of firearms by Yemeni militiamen.

A license is not required to obtain or possess firearms. Carrying of firearms in public places is unrestricted in rural areas, where more than 66% of Yemen's population lives, but state-issued licenses are required to carry them in cities. They are issued on a may-issue basis with varying restrictions in different cities. In 2007, the government cancelled all carry licenses and introduced new additional conditions for them. Carrying rifles (such as the AK-47) was banned in cities with few exceptions.[citation needed]

A government license is also required to be a retailer of arms and ammunition, with retailers also being required to maintain records of stocks and sales, each buyer's name and ID card. Law also regulates the number of bodyguards a person can have, and stipulates that guns may not be passed on to third parties.[7]

Celebratory gunfire also leads to many deaths every year.[2] Many children, mostly boys, carry guns in Yemen.[5]

Firearm ownership

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According to 2017 Small Arms Survey there are roughly 15 million civilian-held firearms in Yemen or 62 per 100 population, making Yemen the second most armed country in the world after the United States.[8]

See also

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Sources

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  1. ^ a b Michael Horton, Yemen: A Dangerous Regional Arms Bazaar, Jamestown.org, 16 January 2017 (accessed 29 August 2019)
  2. ^ a b c Tik Root, Gun Control, Yemen-Style, Theatlantic.com, 12 February 2013 (accessed 29 August 2019)
  3. ^ Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg, Yemen must save itself from ruinous gun culture, Arabnews.com, 26 February 2018 (accessed 29 August 2019)
  4. ^ Yemen — Gun Facts, Figures and the Law Archived 2021-08-21 at the Wayback Machine, Gunpolicy.org (accessed 29 August 2019)
  5. ^ a b Mohammed Al Qalisi, Awash with weapons, Yemen’s gun culture puts children in harm’s way, Thenational.ae, 13 February 2017 (accessed 29 August 2019)
  6. ^ Tom Finn, Yemen In Need Of A Gun Control Law, Refliefweb.int, 3 October 2010 (accessed 29 August 2019)
  7. ^ a b Yemen: The devastating war waged with European weapons, Dw.com, 29 November 2018 (accessed 29 August 2019)
  8. ^ Fault lines. Tracking armed violence in Yemen,[dead link] Gunpolicy.org (accessed 29 August 2019)