The Standard (St. Catharines)

World gun laws versus the NRA

NRA plays a major role in firearm debates worldwide

- AMANDA ERICKSON

In 2013, the National Rifle Associatio­n took aim at the United Nations.

The UN was pushing an Arms Trade Treaty that would ban the sale of weapons to regimes committing genocide or war crimes. To the NRA, though, this was not about keeping bombs and tanks from North Korea and Iran. It was an assault on freedom, a stealth attempt to regulate firearms in the United States.

As the NRA put it on their website: “The most pressing internatio­nal threat to U.S. gun owners is the UN Arms Trade Treaty ... (If passed,) U.S. firearms policy could become the rest of the world’s business and subject to its approval, on pain of trade restrictio­ns if it doesn’t meet ‘internatio­nal norms.’ ”

That is typical of the group’s lobbying efforts around the world. The NRA wields plenty of influence at home — influence that has come under increasing scrutiny in the month since the school massacre in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 14. It has also intervened to help block attempts to regulate firearms in other countries, hoping to protect both gun ownership and potential markets for gun manufactur­ers.

In the case of the Arms Trade Treaty, it did not matter that the pact included explicit language recognizin­g “legitimate trade and lawful ownership, and use of certain convention­al arms for recreation­al, cultural, historical and sporting activities,” or that U.S. officials and the American Bar Associatio­n said there would be no impact on American gun rights or the Second Amendment.

The NRA ran an aggressive internatio­nal lobbying effort to try to get all references to firearms dropped. The World Forum on Shooting Activities, an internatio­nal coalition of gun manufactur­ers and gun-rights activists founded by the NRA in 1997, also spoke against the treaty. When that did not work, the group began lobbying congressio­nal leaders, urging them not to ratify the measure. Ultimately, the treaty was signed by the Obama administra­tion, but never ratified by Congress.

Other UN efforts have met similar fates. As Scott Stedjan of Oxfam Internatio­nal put it, there are now more global agreements regulating the trade of bananas than of AK-47s.

It is just one way the NRA has helped shape the internatio­nal conversati­on on guns. Though it does not actively fund lobbyists around the world, the organizati­on has played a major role in firearms debates all over the globe. It worked to defeat gun control bills in Canada, South Africa and the United Kingdom. As David Morton put it in Foreign Policy: “The NRA may not be actively funding gun lobbies around the world — the organizati­on claims its charter prohibits it — but its influence is felt in much more than dollars. It lends support to the anti-gun control effort at the UN. It promotes lines of argument, strategy and political tactics that others adopt for local use. And, if you contact the associatio­n, its representa­tives will come to explain how to get it done. Although many of the NRA’s members may not own a passport, their leaders are savvy operators in internatio­nal politics. For all their red-blooded American pretension­s, they have a deep understand­ing of how globalizat­ion works.”

In Canada, for example, the NRA employed several strategies to help gun-rights activists. In the 1990s, when politician­s were trying to strengthen gun-control laws, the NRA called on its members to boycott hunting in Canada, which would have dealt a significan­t blow to the country’s tourism industry.

NRA leaders have also spoken frequently in Canada about the importance of protecting the right to bear arms, and they have worked with groups like the Canadian Shooting Sports Associatio­n to build its lobbying capabiliti­es.

In Brazil, the organizati­on stepped in to help kill a 2005 referendum that would have banned the sale of firearms and ammunition to civilians.

At the time, Brazil had one of the highest rates of gun violence in the world. A Brazilian was being killed by a gun every 15 seconds. Politician­s, church leaders and law enforcemen­t agreed a ban would help stem the tide of violence. When it was announced, a majority of Brazilians supported it.

Then the country’s gun-rights activists teamed up with the NRA. In 2003, NRA lobbyist Charles Cunningham travelled to Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro to speak to sports-shooting organizati­ons, gun collectors and other gun-rights advocates. He spoke about the U.S. Constituti­on and the NRA’s history. This fight, Cunningham told them, was about more than guns. It is about freedom, he said, according to the New York Times.

That message was translated into a series of effective ads. In one, a news anchor looks directly into the camera and warns that “people are misreprese­nting the disarmamen­t issue. It won’t disarm criminals.” Then comes a montage that includes Nelson Mandela’s release from prison and the famous Tank Man of Tiananmen Square.

“Your rights are at risk,” says the anchor. “Don’t lose your grip on liberty.”

Researcher­s say support for the gun-control measure dropped in the weeks the ad aired. It was ultimately defeated, 64 per cent to 36 per cent.

“We didn’t lose because Brazilians like guns. We lost because people don’t have confidence in the government or the police,” Denis Mizne of the anti-violence group Sou da Paz said to the BBC. “The ‘No’ campaign was much more effective. They are talking about a right to have a gun. It is a totally American debate.”

The NRA’s obsession with fighting gun control might be ideologica­l. Or it might have something to do with protecting the global market of gun buyers. After all, the group represents many of the world’s top weapons manufactur­ers. Protecting the right to bear arms also protects their right to sell to anyone, anywhere.

 ?? MARLA BROSE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The National Rifle Associatio­n has given more than $7 million in grants to hundreds of U.S. schools in recent years.
MARLA BROSE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The National Rifle Associatio­n has given more than $7 million in grants to hundreds of U.S. schools in recent years.
 ?? RICARDO MORAES ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Police stop a protest over a shootout involving drug trafficker­s in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where the NRA helped kill a referendum on gun sales.
RICARDO MORAES ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Police stop a protest over a shootout involving drug trafficker­s in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where the NRA helped kill a referendum on gun sales.
 ?? GEORGE OSODI ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Experts say there are more global agreements regulating the trade of bananas than of AK-47s.
GEORGE OSODI ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Experts say there are more global agreements regulating the trade of bananas than of AK-47s.

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