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Countries with the most guns list has some surprises

The Small Arms Survey, a research project run by a Swiss university, publishes a ranking of estimated civilian gun ownership that is, registered guns and the list by country has some surprises.

Switzerland-based Small Arms Survey lists countries with the most guns per capita

These guns were on sale in California on Monday, the same day U.S. President Barack Obama announced new, tighter gun rules in the wake of a wave of mass shootings last year. (Mike Blake/Reuters)

The Small Arms Survey, a research project run by a Swiss university, publishes a ranking of estimated civiliangun ownership by country.

While the survey is a trusted and widely used document, the numbers are based on averages that, in some cases like Yemen and Switzerland include big margins of error. With that in mind, there remains no doubt as to which country has the most guns in private hands.

1.The U.S. has88.8 guns for every100 residents.

Barack Obama said on Monday that his planto tighten gun controlis"well within"his authority and remains consistent with the Second Amendment, Americans' constitutional right to bear arms.

Members of a Florida survival group get ready for a training exercise near Old Town, Fla., in 2012. The group passionately supports the right of U.S. citizens to bear arms, according to its website. (Brian Blanco/Reuters)

2.Yemen has 54.8 guns per 100 residents.

The Saudi-led, U.S.-supported coalition in Yemen is enmeshed in a years-long fight against Iran-backed Houthi rebels, with al-Qaeda and ISIS exploiting the chaos to maintain a hold on the Arabian Peninsula.

Perhaps not surprisingly, war-ravaged Yemen is second on the list. This young Houthi boy was photographed in Sanaa in 2014. (Khaled Abdullah/Reuters)

Weapons belonging to the military are excluded from the Small Arms Survey, which is in part why Switzerland could rank anywhere from second to 16th, depending onwhether the guns held by Swiss adults manyof whom are part of an armed civilian militiacount.In Yemen, access to accurate information poses a similarchallenge to reporting.


3.Switzerland has 45.7 guns per 100 residents.

Switzerland is alone in Western Europe in its attitude towardgun ownership. Swiss men, all considered part of the militia after mandatory arms training, are permitted to keep their service rifles at home. In contrast to the Small Arms Survey figures, government numbersput gun ownership at about 25 for every100 Swiss.

The Ruetlischiessen is an annual shooting competition dating from 1860. Until 2007, militia members (which included nearly all Swiss men) were required to keep a box of sealed, government-issued ammunition, along with their service rifles, in their homes. (Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters)

4.Finland is45.3 for every100 people.

Gun ownership in Finland is among the highest in the world, although crime rates remain among the world'slowest.

Hunter Reino Haapaa loads up at a shooting range in Kurikka, about 330 kilometres from Helsinki, in 2008. (Ints Kalnins/Reuters)

5.Serbia has 37.8 guns per 100 residents.

Bombed by U.S.-led NATO airstrikes in the 1999 war against forces loyal toSlobodan Milosevic, Serbia which is steadily moving toward full ascension into the E.U. re-entered the international arms market in the mid-2000s with deals to produce small-calibre guns for the U.S. arms firm Remington.

A worker carries an assault rifle made at the Zastava Arms factory in the Serbian town of Kragujevac, some 137 kilometres from Belgrade, in 2013. (Marko Djurica/Reuters)

6.Cyprus has 36.4 guns for every100 people.

The Mediterranean island nation of Cyprus, off the coasts of Turkey, Syria and Lebanon, has had a tumultuous history that includes a continuing, and at times violent, territorial dispute betweenCypriots of Turkish and Greek ancestry.

A Turkish Cypriot man takes a load off next to a police officer in Nicosia, in the Turkish-administered northern part of the island, in 2010. (Murad Sezer/Reuters)

7. 35 gunsfor every 100 Saudis.

While firearms ownership and licensing are highly regulated in thiscountry, Saudi Arabia is known to have a widespread black market trade in firearms.

A Saudi visitor to the Special Operations Forces Exhibition and Conference, (SOFEX) held in Amman, Jordan, brandishes a pair of pistols at the expo in 2010. The military exhibition, billed as a networking event for global security, is an annual event. (Nader Daoud/AP)

8.Iraq has approximately34.2 firearms for every100 people...

But a total gun count is all but impossible after years ofwar following the2003 invasion and 2011 pullout of U.S. forces. The Iraqi insurgency has continued as fighters from the Syrian civil war, as well as ISIS militants,have spilled into the country.

Iraqi forces backed by militia fighters recaptured a mountain palace complex formerly owned by Saddam Hussein from ISIS fighters in October 2015, as government forces pushed ahead on a major offensive against the insurgents. (Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters)

9.Uruguay has 31.8 guns per 100 people.

For a country with only 3.3 million people, firearms possession in Uruguay is unusually high with some 605,000 weapons registered with the government, according GunPolicy.org. Nearly 89 per cent of Uruguay's registered gun owners are civilians, according to the defence ministry registry.

Uruguayan soldiers stack confiscated guns in Montevideo during the launch of a program to decrease the number of civilian-owned guns circulating in the population in 2008. (Andres Stapff/Reuters)

10th and 11th place: Sweden and Norway have 31.6and 31.3 firearms per 100 residents respectively.

Swedish hunter Henrik Widlund takes part in the annual wolf hunt in Hasselforsreviret, in central Sweden, in 2011. That year, there was an allotted annual quota of 20 wolves for the area. (Anders Wiklund/Scanpix/Reuters)

Right behind France, which has 31.2 guns/100 people, Canada places 13th on the Small Arms Survey list with 30.8 firearms per 100 residents.

Competitors load their their guns (with blanks) during the Canadian Open Fast Draw Championships, held in Aldergrove, B.C., in 2013. (Andy Clark/Reuters)

With files from CBC