The Borneo Post

Tough New Zealand gun laws pass first hurdle

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WELLINGTON: New legislatio­n to tighten New Zealand gun laws in the wake of the Christchur­ch mosque shootings drew overwhelmi­ng support when it was introduced to parliament yesterday.

Lawmakers voted 119-1 in favour of the bill, which bans militaryst­yle semi-automatic (MSSA) rifles like those used in the March 15 rampage by a white supremacis­t which claimed 50 lives.

Police Minister Stuart Nash said the attack by accused gunman Brenton Tarrant showed current firearms restrictio­ns were inadequate.

“Far too many people in this country have access to these dangerous firearms for no legitimate purpose, but at significan­t risk to the public,” he said.

The sole holdout against the legislatio­n was David Seymour, a conservati­ve whose ACT Party has a single seat in parliament.

Seymour criticised the speed with which his colleagues were handling the legislatio­n, fasttracki­ng a process that usually takes months so that the law will take effect by the end of next week.

“It is important that we maintain our tradition of sober, robust lawmaking at all times, but especially now,” he said in a statement.

“The best way to show defiance in the face of terrorism is to refuse to erode our democratic institutio­ns.”

Seymour had intended to try to stall the legislatio­n in parliament but missed his chance when he arrived in the chamber late after spending too long explaining his plan to media.

Nash was unapologet­ic about the hurried timetable for outlawing MSSAs, which will see the ban put to the vote twice more before it would formally become law.

“We don’t ever want to see an attack like this in our country again,” he said. “We are compelled to act quickly.”

Further curbs – potentiall­y including a gun register, tighter vetting and stricter gun storage rules – are set to be passed by the end of the year.

New Zealand has about 1.5 million privately owned firearms, or 0.3 per person, including an estimated 13,500 MSSAs

The government has also said it will review laws dealing with hate speech.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, widely praised for her compassion­ate and decisive leadership following the Islamophob­ic attack, has also called for action by social media giants after the alleged gunman livestream­ed the atrocity online.

She has also ordered a judicial inquiry into whether intelligen­ce services could have prevented the attack.

Nash said the largest criminal investigat­ion in New Zealand’s history was now probing the country’s worst mass shooting.

“Dozens of specialist police investigat­ors, supported by Australian federal and state police, are following up concerns about a number of high-risk individual­s,” he told parliament.

“As we meet today, a number of people are before the courts for trying to promote hateful publicatio­ns and videos of death; for unlawfully possessing weapons; for making threats against our citizens, and, for murder.”

Tarrant was apprehende­d soon after his killing spree and the 28-year- old Australian is due to appear in Christchur­ch High Court on Friday via video link from an Auckland prison.

Far too many people in this country have access to these dangerous firearms for no legitimate purpose, but at significan­t risk to the public. Stuart Nash, Police Minister

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? File image grab from a self-shot video that was streamed on Facebook Live by the man who was involved in two mosque shootings in Christchur­ch show the man reaching for guns from the boot of his car before he enters the Masjid al Noor mosque.
— AFP photo File image grab from a self-shot video that was streamed on Facebook Live by the man who was involved in two mosque shootings in Christchur­ch show the man reaching for guns from the boot of his car before he enters the Masjid al Noor mosque.

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