Oman Daily Observer

After two mass shootings, can Serbia rid itself of guns?

- Aleksandar Vasovic The writer works for Reuters

After Serbia was rocked by two mass shootings in two days earlier in May, Branko, 54, surrendere­d his unlicensed arms under a government amnesty: four assault rifles, nine handguns, eight grenades and many boxes of ammunition.

The huge cache of weapons handed over by just one veteran of the wars that tore apart Yugoslavia in the 1990s highlights the scale of the task facing the nation, where arms from a 19th century uprising against Ottoman rule and old British Bren machine guns parachuted to partisans in World War Two are also still hoarded.

“I surrendere­d my weapons as I was horrified at what happened,” said Branko - who asked to be identified by his old military callsign — referring to the May 3 shooting where a teenage pupil at a Belgrade school killed 10 people, and another the next day when a man killed eight in a village south of the capital.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic pledged to “practicall­y disarm” his country, with the government quickly launching a month-long amnesty for illegal weapons.

More than 26,094 firearms, over 1.3 million rounds of ammunition and 6,333 pieces of ordnance had been handed in since May 8, interior ministry official Bojana Otovic Pjanovic told state TV RTS.

“There were weapons from 1847 and 1907, (old) English revolvers, a guidance system for anti-tank missiles, a fuse to which 4.6 kilograms of explosives were attached,” Pjanovic Otovic said.

Political opponents — who have long demanded tighter arms controls — call the move a populist step that cannot solve Serbia’s illegal weapons problem, while organising mass protests against the violence they say permeates society. “This cannot be done quickly due to the estimated quantity of weapons ...People here have no awareness about the dangers of holding illegal weapons,” said Jelena Jerinic, a law professor and a parliament­ary deputy of the Ne Davimo Beograd opposition movement.

Many of the military grade weapons which flooded into Serbia and the rest of Western Balkans as Yugoslavia disintegra­ted ended up in private hands, turbocharg­ing a culture of weapons ownership that Belgrade University history professor Aleksandar Zivotic describes as “ingrained in the (nation’s) foundation­s”.

Organised crime and various statespons­ored nationalis­t paramilita­ries flourished during and after the wars, with dozens of people killed in gangland-style shootings until the early 2000s.

Authoritie­s have struggled to assess the current scale of the problem. According to SEESAC, a UN and Eu-backed regional gun-control initiative, the number of registered civilian firearms in Serbia increased almost 10 per cent between 2012 and 2016 to 618,061. Officials’ estimates of unlicensed pieces range anywhere from 90,000 to 700,000.

Even in a country whose gun laws are tight by some European standards, Filip Svarm, editor in-chief of the Vreme weekly and a prominent analyst in the field, said it would take years for the state to disarm its citizens and he did not believe the amnesty and harsh sentences would solve the problem.

“The aggressive­ness that is constantly fuelled in society affects some people in such a way that they now want to keep or get illegal guns,” he said.

Since May’s shootings, Vucic has halted issuance of new gun permits, tightened rules for existing owners and pledged changes to the law so it does not pay to keep illegal weapons.

It is not the first time the government has offered an amnesty — according to police data, 101,283 weapons and 2,517,520 rounds of ammunition were handed in between 2003 and 2017 — and it has already been steadily tightening requiremen­ts to legally hold a weapon. Opposition politician­s, however, say enforcemen­t can be lax.

Licensed gun owner Narcis Selimic, a marketing executive from Belgrade who has a 11-year-old son, was among those giving up his pistol, bought for personal protection in the 1990s, under the current amnesty.

MORE THAN 26,094 FIREARMS, OVER 1.3 MILLION ROUNDS OF AMMUNITION AND 6,333 PIECES OF ORDNANCE HAD BEEN HANDED IN SINCE MAY 8

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 ?? Reuters ?? A police officer stands guard in front of the weapons handed over to police in the first 10 days of gun amnesty, near Smederevo, Serbia. —
Reuters A police officer stands guard in front of the weapons handed over to police in the first 10 days of gun amnesty, near Smederevo, Serbia. —

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