Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Global Peace Index 2008: Azerbaijan One Of Most Aggressive Countries

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Global Peace Index 2008: Azerbaijan One Of Most Aggressive Countries

    GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2008: AZERBAIJAN ONE OF MOST AGGRESSIVE COUNTRIES IN THE WORLD

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    21.05.2008 14:34 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Most countries in the world are performing better
    against key measures of peacefulness compared with last year,
    according to the latest rankings of the Global Peace Index(GPI),
    now in its second year.

    This year the Index has been expanded to rank 140 countries - from
    Afghanistan to Zimbabwe - according to how peaceful they are, both
    domestically and how they interact with the outside world.

    Azerbaijan ranks 101, thus entering the list of the most aggressive
    countries of the world. Baltic states - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania -
    are the most peaceful among the post soviet republics, the Financial
    Times reports.

    The Index is constructed from 24 indicators of external and internal
    measures of peace including UN deployments overseas and levels of
    violent crime.

    Iceland, making its first appearance in the Index, tops the
    rankings. Countries in Scandinavia have also emerged as among the
    most peaceful countries on the planet with Denmark (2) and Norway
    (3) scoring very highly. New Zealand (4) and Japan (5) - the only
    member of the G8 in the top ten - complete the highest ranked. The
    United States held virtually steady at number 97, dropping one slot
    from last year's rank of 96.

    But other nations, including Angola (110), Indonesia (68) and India
    (107), have demonstrated the greatest improvements compared to last
    year's Index.

    Based on a direct comparison of the 121 countries measured in the GPI
    2007 to GPI 2008, a majority of the individual indicators have seen
    slight improvements. On average, scores for level of organized conflict
    (internal) and violent crime, political instability and potential
    for terrorist acts have all improved marginally. In contrast, the
    world's armed services have grown on average per country, as has the
    sophistication of its weaponry.

    Other key findings: small, stable and democratic countries are the
    most peaceful - 16 of the top 20 are western or central European
    democracies; the G8 fared very differently: Japan (5), Canada (11),
    Germany (14), Italy (28), France (36), UK (49), United States (97),
    Russia (131); Iraq is the lowest ranked country on the Index (140).
Working...
X