Times Colonist

Ottawa looking at stricter handgun controls

- TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA — The federal government is prepared to consider tightening handgun laws, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told reporters Tuesday as he responded to questions surroundin­g the deadly weekend shooting in Toronto.

But changing the laws or reclassify­ing weapons is not a simple task, Goodale warned before testifying at an immigratio­n committee meeting.

“That would require significan­t remodellin­g of the Criminal Code,” he said.

Ottawa has been looking at changes to Criminal Code handgun provisions — not based on the Toronto shooting, but after hearing testimony this year from people affected by the January 2017 mosque shooting in Quebec City, where six people were killed, the minister said.

Following Sunday’s attack in Toronto’s Danforth area, in which authoritie­s said 29-year-old Faisal Hussain killed an 18-year-old woman and a 10-year-old girl and wounded 13 others, the city’s mayor renewed calls for tougher restrictio­ns on firearms.

Goodale said the Trudeau government will look at proposals already before lawmakers to see what changes could be made.

“A number of groups and organizati­ons made representa­tions to that effect earlier this year,” said the minister.

“I said that we would be prepared to consider their arguments, and we will do that.

“We’ll examine the proposal to see if it can be effective.”

Goodale also said that Hussain was not on any federal watchlists associated with national security.

Hussain’s parents have said their son struggled with psychosis and depression and that they were devastated by his violent actions.

In a speech at Toronto city council chambers just hours after the shooting, Mayor John Tory said there is a growing problem of people improperly acquiring guns that were originally purchased legally, and that has to stop.

“Why does anyone in this city need to have a gun at all?”

That sentiment was echoed Tuesday by Liberal MP and former Toronto city councillor Adam Vaughan, who suggested handguns be banned outright in large urban centres. “I don’t own a gun and I can’t see why anyone else would,” said Vaughan, parliament­ary secretary responsibl­e for housing and urban affairs.

Vaughan said there should be two sets of rules depending on where people live.

“It is different in rural Canada. I understand the argument of hunters and fishers, but no one is using handguns to cull the raccoon population in Toronto,” he said.

“Handguns are being used to kill people in Toronto, and, quite frankly, we’ve had enough.”

Bill Blair, the former Toronto police chief who was appointed last week as minister responsibl­e for reducing organized crime, said lawmakers should be looking at more than simply handguns as they work to get illegal weapons off the streets.

“I think we really need to focus on those guns that are getting into the hands of criminals and people who commit violent crimes in our city,” Blair said. “The causes and solutions to violence are varied and I think it’s really important that we be open to looking at every avenue that we can take.”

The Criminal Code already imposes restrictio­ns on handguns and other firearms, but some critics have called for a further tightening both on handguns and certain semi-automatic weapons.

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