The Welland Tribune

Trudeau defers to police on gun restrictio­ns

Liberals under pressure to clamp down on military-style rifles

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — Police, not politician­s, should decide what restrictio­ns to place on specific kinds of guns, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday, his Liberal government under renewed pressure to impose an outright ban on military-style semi-automatic rifles.

Trudeau’s comments come after a group of people impacted by last year’s deadly Quebec City mosque shooting — a number of wounded, as well as family members of the six people killed — urged him to outlaw militaryst­yle weapons outright.

He touted provisions of his government’s firearms bill, which once passed would restore the authority of RCMP experts to classify firearms without political influence, repealing cabinet’s authority to overrule Mountie determinat­ions.

In a letter Monday to the prime minister, more than 75 people express disappoint­ment the bill does not ban semi-automatic rifles like the one carried by mosque shooter Alexandre Bissonnett­e.

Bissonnett­e began his January 2017 assault with a .223-calibre Small Arms VZ 58 Sporter rifle, which is legal, along with two illegal 30-cartridge magazines.

The rifle jammed on the first shot, and Bissonnett­e then used a handgun, but the letter asks how much worse the carnage could have been had Bissonnett­e’s rifle worked.

“What kind of society allows a single individual to have so much destructiv­e, lethal power at their disposal?” the letter says.

Firearms in Canada are classified as either nonrestric­ted (such as ordinary hunting rifles and shotguns), restricted (handguns, certain rifles) or prohibited (certain handguns, fully automatic firearms and sawed-off rifles).

Restricted and prohibited firearms must be registered and entail additional safety training. In addition, their use is limited to people such as target shooters and collectors.

The RCMP’s firearms program determines the technical classifica­tion of a gun according to criteria in the Criminal Code.

As such, the Mounties are limited to interpreti­ng definition­s establishe­d by the government, says the group PolySeSouv­ient, which includes graduates and students of Montreal’s Ecole Polytechni­que, where 14 women were gunned down in 1989.

In a brief to a House of Commons committee studying the bill, the group says the current Criminal Code definition­s allow some “assault weapons” to be legal.

“Unfortunat­ely, this system results in classifica­tions that are not consistent with the risks of many weapons,” the brief says.

“Indeed, despite the general objective of banning assault weapons of both 1991 and 1995 legislativ­e reforms, weapons designed for military purposes have become more accessible.”

During a committee meeting Tuesday, NDP public safety critic Matthew Dube asked Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale whether he was open to adding or revising definition­s in the current bill or a future one.

“We need clarity that would benefit gun owners and also those people who want to ensure public safety.”

Goodale said he would consider such a proposal. “I’m open to all constructi­ve suggestion­s and ideas.”

The bill would expand the scope of background checks on those who want to acquire a gun. Instead of just the five years immediatel­y preceding a licence applicatio­n, personal history questions would cover a person’s entire lifetime.

In addition, gun retailers would be required to keep records of firearms inventory and sales, a measure intended to assist police in investigat­ing gun traffickin­g and other crimes.

The bill would also require purchasers to present a firearms licence, while the seller would have to ensure its validity.

Conservati­ve MP Glen Motz said the bill is “embarrassi­ngly lacking” on measures to address gang-related gun violence.

Goodale stresses the bill is complement­ed by expenditur­es of more than $327 million over five years, and $100 million a year thereafter, to address criminal gun and gang activities.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG
THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau participat­es in the National Prayer Breakfast in Ottawa on Tuesday.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau participat­es in the National Prayer Breakfast in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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