Baghdad: Try as he might, Baghdad
businessman Ibrahim Georges can't persuade his 11-year-old
daughter Sandy to lay down her arms in favour of something
less hostile, such as a doll.
"She loves her gun," Georges said as Sandy, short-haired and dressed in long trousers and T-shirt, proudly displayed a menacing GC toy automatic rifle that, according to a bold stamp on the side, was made in China.
"She never plays with dolls," added Georges ruefully,
outside their home in a quiet residential street in the
relatively calm western Karrada suburb.
"It has laser and can fire on regular or on
automatic," said Sandy, brandishing the gun that can spit out
6mm BB pellets hard enough to take out an eye and is sold in
a box carrying a warning that says, "The best for 18 and up."
"All the children in the streets have toy guns," said
Georges with a shrug, pointing to a gang of boys with whom he
said his daughter plays "Cops and Robbers".
"They see adults carrying guns all the time. Who can
blame them?" Children's make-believe war games, which often reflect
the sectarian conflict raging across Iraq, have alarmed some
parents and educators, and the government has expressed
concern at the flood of toy weapons on the streets.
Earlier this year, Trade Minister Abed Falah al-Sudani
considered banning the toys because they look so realistic.
However, given the seeming impossibility of the task, he
appears to have shelved the idea.
Whether invented by parents to scare their children or
whether it really happened, all children know the reason it
would, perhaps, not be a good idea to point a plastic weapon
anywhere near a US soldier.
"One boy was killed by an American soldier who mistook
his toy for a real gun," said one of Sandy's friends, who gave
his name as Zain and his age as 12, parroting the correct
answer. According to shopkeeper Uday Mohammed, the incident
really did happen "about a year ago in Diyala province," which
is why he warns children buying guns from his store to be
ultra careful about displaying them in public.
Mohammed said toy guns are his biggest sellers by far,
and that there had been a run on imitation weapons during the
just-ended Eid ul-Fitr Muslim festival, when children are
given new clothes and toys.
"I normally sell 10 to 12 guns a day," he said,
pointing to a range of weapons in boxes ranging from plastic
pistols and crude weapons that shoot rubber darts, to an
ultra-sophisticated automatic rifle that boasts laser, an
"infrared callimater" and "illuminate blueness".
"But over Eid we sold many, many more," he said. "If
the children were not coming in to buy guns, they were coming
in to buy pellets."
Prices range from 5,000 to 40,000 dinars (four to 32
dollars), but the favourite, according to 24-year-old
Mohammed, is the MP7AI rifle, reasonably priced at 10,000
dinars. "It is cheaper and it is the type of rifle children
see in American movies; that's why it is so popular," said the
computer engineer who is selling toys because he cannot find
work in his own specialised sphere.
He said he was concerned at the increasing demand for
toy guns, even though it was helping keep the tills jingling.
"I don't think it is good; children become aggressive
when they play with guns," he said. "Children are seeing too
many people with guns -- from the police to the Army to the
militias."
Bureau Report