The United States is known for having some of the most relaxed firearms laws in the world, to the delight and dismay of the domestic population, depending on one’s political views. But the availability of guns also creates problems for America’s geographical neighbors in Latin America and the Caribbean, where less developed states struggle to handle the flow of guns into their countries.
Joining the discussion:
- Chantal Flores is an investigative journalist.
- Michael Vigil is Former Chief of International Operations at the US Drug Enforcement Administration.
- Rafael Bernal is a staff writer for The Hill.
- Art Estopinan is president of the Estopinan Group and a former advisor to the chair of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Haiti descends into an 'open-air prison' with 'apocalyptic' violence fueled by military guns shipped from AMERICA – while gangs maraud the country and two men are hacked to death in street https://t.co/k9dY4LEu57 pic.twitter.com/h7BN1nqyYe
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) April 1, 2024
Haiti: US guns pour into Port-au-Prince, fuelling surge in violence https://t.co/QisCQsYNck
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) March 27, 2024