Control Arms Campaign - Global
Mobilising public support for these aims is a central campaign strategy. Participating organisations are launching international, regional, and national campaigns to reach particular objectives, including public awareness raising campaigns and lobbying campaigns. Materials available on the official Control Arms campaign site are a video, a poster [PDF], screensavers for download, and tee-shirts for sale.
To cite one example of a global campaign, organisers are working to create a "Million Faces" petition - a large grassroots movement to pressure governments to address the misuse of arms. The petition is an effort to graphically illustrate demand from people (hopefully 1 million) around the world for international action on the arms trade. Instead of signing a petition, supporters are asked to email a photo of themselves or to chose a prepared image from an electronic photo gallery. Details and instructions are provided on a special registration page on the campaign website, which is available in English, Spanish, French, and Arabic. The pictures, which feature faces of people holding up signs with messages such as "Stop the terror trade", appear on the home page of the campaign site; they cycle each time the page is refreshed. Organisers will present these photographs to governments in what is hoped will be a statement of mass public antipathy to the arms trade. In addition, as part of the broad campaign launch on October 9 2003, people gathered on the North Terrace of Trafalgar Square to have their photos taken or to draw a self-portrait. Beginning November 15 2003, these faces were pasted over a 7m x 3m gun painted on a billboard. Also at the campaign launch, hundreds of gravestones representing those who die each year from armed violence were laid out across Trafalgar Square.
Organisers say that, whether delivered into the hands of armed groups or abusive regimes, the ready availability of illegal and unregulated arms fuels conflicts that cost lives, imperil livelihoods, and restrict liberty. They claim that national arms export controls are riddled with loopholes: "The easy availability of arms increases the incidence of armed violence, acts as a trigger for conflicts, and prolongs wars once they break out."
Control Arms campaign site; and "Press Invite: Amnesty International, Oxfam, IANSA Launch Global Arms Trade Campaign -- 9 October 2003"; andPax Christi Action Programme Proposal [PDF]; and Artists for Amnesty Monthly Bulletin, August 2003; and"Charities campaign against arms trade", BBC News, October 9 2003.
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