Cape Breton Post

Assault weapons ban

Two-year amnesty period will allow legal owners to comply

- ANDREA GUNN

OTTAWA — Canada has banned what the government is calling military-style assault weapons.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Friday that more than 1,500 makes and models of firearms will be banned effective immediatel­y.

The Liberal government has long planned to ban militaryst­yle assault weapons — it was one of their key 2019 campaign promises — but calls on Ottawa to act increased in recent weeks in the aftermath of the mass shooting in Nova Scotia on April 18 that left 22 dead in the worst mass shooting in Canada’s history.

While details of the weapons used by the shooter have not been made public, police say one of the weapons used could be described that way. Others described a long-barreled gun and a shotgun. He did not have a firearms licence.

“Every one of us remembers the day when we realized that in Canada, a man with a gun could irrevocabl­y alter our lives for the worse,” Trudeau said, citing past tragedies like École Polytechni­que, the Quebec City mosque shooting and the Nova Scotia shooting.

“This chapter in our history cannot be rewritten but what will happen next is up to us,” Trudeau said.

“We can stick to thoughts and prayers alone or we can unite as a country and put an end to this.”

With Friday’s announceme­nt, effective immediatel­y, what the government is calling military-style assault weapons are banned and cannot be used, bought, sold, lent, imported or transporte­d.

Fully-automatic weapons are already outlawed in Canada, but Friday’s ban includes nine principle models of semiautoma­tic rifles including the AR-15, which has been used in a number of U.S. mass shootings, M16, M4, AR-10, as well as their component part known as the “upper receiver." It also bans the Ruger Mini-14 rifle, which is the style of gun used in the École Polytechni­que massacre.

Also banned are “firearms with a bore 20mm or greater” (e.g., grenade launchers) and “firearms capable of dischargin­g a projectile with a muzzle energy greater than 10,000 Joules” (e.g. sniper rifles) as well as current and future variants.

A list of 1,500 newly-banned weapons is now available in the Canada Gazette but the government says all current and future variants of these listed guns are prohibited, whether listed or not.

A technical briefing on the ban says the models were chosen based on the following criteria: semi-automatic action with sustained rapid-fire capability (tactical/military design with large magazine capacity), modern design, and being present in large volumes in the Canadian market.

“As of today, the market for assault weapons in Canada is closed. Enough is enough,” Blair said. “From this moment forward the number of these guns will only decrease in Canada.”

There are a number of notable exceptions to the ban: first of all, there will be two year amnesty period written into Canada’s Criminal Code, until April 30, 2022, to give legal owners of these varieties of firearms time to come into compliance with the new laws — but even during the amnesty period these weapons cannot be used and must be stored safely. Trudeau said the government will legislate fair compensati­on via a buyback program for law-abiding gun owners. Technical briefing documents say the government intends to offer owners the choice of either grandfathe­ring or compensati­on if they surrender the firearm.

In addition, the nowbanned varieties of firearms can be exported outside of Canada with the proper permits, and can only be transporte­d for the purpose of deactivati­on, returning to their rightful owner, exporting with a valid permit, or surrenderi­ng to police (only by appointmen­t). Gun vendors are also allowed to send them back to the manufactur­er.

There are exceptions under the amnesty for Indigenous peoples exercising Aboriginal or treaty rights to hunt, and for those who hunt or trap to sustain themselves or their families. These exceptions will allow for the continued use of newly prohibited guns in limited circumstan­ces but only until a suitable replacemen­t can be found.

By the end of the amnesty period, all firearms owners must comply with the ban.

“You don’t need an AR-15 to bring down a deer,” Trudeau said.

Blair noted that the overwhelmi­ng majority of gun owners in Canada are lawabiding, conscienti­ous, and safe, and obtained their firearms legally.

While some feel assault weapons may have recreation­al value, Blair said, all varieties of guns being banned by the government were designed solely for the purpose of killing the most people in the shortest period of time, and have been used in Canada and other countries a number of times for exactly that purpose

“These guns have no legitimate civilian purpose,” Blair said. “They don't belong in our communitie­s”

The ban announced Friday does not require legislatio­n to put in place, other legislatio­n will be required for related items like a buyback program.

While Trudeau said he is confident he will have the support of the opposition parties in passing legislatio­n related to the ban, a statement from Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer released Friday

afternoon implied otherwise.

“Justin Trudeau is using the current pandemic and the immediate emotion of the horrific attack in Nova Scotia to push the Liberals’ ideologica­l agenda and make major firearms policy changes. That is wrong,” Scheer said.

“The Trudeau Liberals have made it clear throughout this crisis that they do not respect the democratic role of Parliament. That cannot continue. If the Prime Minister has the strength of his conviction­s, he should wait until the health crisis has passed and introduce legislatio­n in the House of Commons, so that it can be debated, and Canadians’ voices can be heard.”

An Angus Reid poll released Friday shows an overwhelmi­ng majority — 78 per cent — of Canadians support a complete prohibitio­n on civilian possession of assault weapons.

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