Business World

Manila cites strict gun control law ahead of elections

- John Victor D. Ordoñez

THE PHILIPPINE­S is enforcing a strict gun licensing system, Trade officials told the United Nations (UN) on Wednesday, amid expectatio­ns of an uptick in gun-related violence as the campaign period for next year’s midterm elections draws near.

The country is working on an electronic licensing platform for firearms, Assistant Director Domina Pia Salazar told UN member-states in Geneva during a meeting on the implementa­tion of the Arms Trade Treaty, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said in a statement on Thursday.

“The importance of transparen­cy and good practices in reporting to build trust and confidence among states in preventing the proliferat­ion and diversion of illicit arms were also underscore­d in the meetings,” it said.

The Philippine­s has grappled with rampant electionre­lated violence through the years, usually between candidates from elite families.

Nineteen people died and 19 others were hurt in the village and youth council elections in October, according to the Commission on Elections.

The country ratified the Arms Trade Treaty in March 2022, which seeks to prevent illegal gun trading and regulate convention­al firearms trade. It took effect three months later.

The country enacted the Strategic Trade Management Act in 2015, which set up the Department of Trade and Industry Strategic Trade Management Office, which issues import and export permits for convention­al weapons.

Ms. Salazar said her office would work closely with the Philippine National Police’s Firearms and Explosives Office to monitor import and export permits for weapons.

Convention­al weapons are widely used and designed for military purposes, without being classified as weapons of mass destructio­n, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime website. These include small and light guns, battle tanks, armored combat vehicles, missiles and missile launchers.

Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Enrique A. Manalo in December said the country is pushing the creation of internatio­nal guidelines on the ethical use of autonomous weapon systems powered by artificial intelligen­ce (AI), saying their improper use could risk innocent lives.

Autonomous weapons are programmed to kill a specific target. The weapon is deployed to an environmen­t where its AI searches for the target using sensor data such as facial recognitio­n, according to autonomous­weapons.org.

The country is working with 14 other countries on a draft protocol and roadmap that will outlaw these weapon systems under the Convention on Certain Convention­al Weapons.

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