Afghan govt to collect guns ……
So all you gun haters , please , pack up and move to Afghanistan!…….
—– Original Message —– 
From: “SSAA” <[email protected]> 
To: “AAAlist” <[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2001 7:53 PM 
Subject: [ssaa-news] NEWS – Afghan govt to collect guns 
> Afghanistan prepares to disarm gun-loving people 
> 
> By Jeremy Page 
> 
> KABUL, Dec 26 (Reuters) – Satar loves his AK-47. For the last seven 
> years, the 25-year old Afghan mechanic has cleaned it and oiled it with 
> dedicated attention, and even slept with it under his pillow. 
> 
> Now Afghanistan’s new government wants to take it away. 
> 
> “It’s the best gun in the world,” he said proudly, unclipping a full 
> magazine from the Russian-made semi-automatic rifle. “It doesn’t break, 
> it doesn’t jam and it doesn’t overheat.” 
> 
> The administration that took office last Saturday has already banned 
> people from carrying guns on the streets of Kabul in the first step 
> towards disarming a country awash with firearms after 23 years of war. 
> 
> But interim leader Hamid Karzai has yet to explain how he proposes to 
> collect weapons from a population still wary of further fighting, and 
> for whom a gun has long denoted wealth, power and social standing. 
> 
> For many in Afghanistan, a popular saying goes: “You earn your living 
> from the muzzle of a gun.” 
> 
> MUSEUM OF FIREARMS 
> 
> Abdul Wakil’s shop in a backstreet off Kabul’s main bazaar is a museum 
> to Afghan’s long and bloody relationship with firearms. 
> 
> Here you can buy everything from 19th century muskets left over from the 
> British invasions of Afghanistan to Soviet-made rifles from the 
> Communist era and a 1999 Chinese pump-action shotgun smuggled in by 
> Pakistani arms dealers. 
> 
> Despite the pending government ban, business is good. 
> 
> “There are less restrictions now and there is more demand,” said Wakil, 
> whose father and grandfather ran the shop before him. “Some people buy 
> for hunting but they also want a gun in the home for security.” 
> 
> Six years ago, this backstreet was Kabul’s main gun market, where 
> Mujahideen fighters would trade Kalashnikovs, rocket-propelled grenades 
> and hand-guns behind thinly disguised carpet stalls. 
> 
> Today, the arms trade is not so open. 
> 
> Wakil said his shop was licensed only to sell hunting guns, although 
> that appeared to include the Chinese pump-action shotgun, which he would 
> sell for $30. 
> 
> “You can’t buy that stuff here any more,” said Mohammad Ehsan, 34, 
> sitting cross-legged in a stall down the road piled high with army 
> uniforms, webbing and ammunition belts. 
> 
> “People should hand over their weapons,” he said. “There is no need for 
> them anymore. I hate and condemn the use of guns.” 
> 
> ONE DOLLAR GRENADES 
> 
> But behind closed doors, heavy-duty arms such as Kalashnikovs and 
> grenades are still traded between commanders who distribute them to 
> their ragtag forces. 
> 
> Most weapons are Russian, either pillaged from Soviet troops who invaded 
> in 1979 or sold by Moscow to the Northern Alliance when it was fighting 
> the Taliban. 
> 
> A Kalashnikov costs between five and six million afghanis ($200-300), a 
> Makarov Russian pistol about the same, and a rocket-propelled grenade 
> launcher goes for eight million afghanis. 
> 
> Grenades cost less than a dollar each. 
> 
> Satar was given his gun by a commander when he joined the Northern 
> Alliance to fight against the Taliban at the age of 18. 
> 
> “It took me two days to learn to shoot,” he said. “Now I can hit a 
> sparrow from 100 metres (yards).” 
> 
> Satar will be sad to part with his beloved companion, but he is ready to 
> give it up if his commander gives the order. 
> 
> “I will hand it to the government when we have a police force and an 
> army to provide security,” he said. “But if foreign countries like 
> Pakistan continue to interfere we will take up arms again.” 
> 
> And after seven years of fighting, it will be strange for him to adjust 
> to life without the comfort of his AK under his pillow. 
> 
> “I guess I’ll get used to it after a couple of days,” he said. 
> 
> 07:02 12-26-01 
> 

 
        


