Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SHOOTOUTS IN Canada rattle country proud of its peaceful reputation.

Trudeau calls for tougher controls

- ALAN FREEMAN

OTTAWA — In a scene more common in the United States than in Canada, a shootout at a Toronto bowling alley last weekend left a suspected gang member dead. A 29-year-old woman was caught in the crossfire and later died at a hospital.

For a country proud of its largely peaceful streets and much lower levels of gun violence than in the United States, a recent rash of gang-related shootouts has captured public attention and reignited calls for stricter gun controls.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government is heeding those calls, announcing last week a proposed law that would require more detailed background checks for gun owners and force retailers to maintain records of gun sales for at least 20 years.

The move comes as the United States is grappling with the fallout from the school shooting last month at Parkland, Fla., that left 17 dead and prompted a renewed wave of legislativ­e efforts to tighten gun laws. It also sparked the March for Our Lives, which attracted hundreds of thousands of teens and adults at protests against gun violence in Washington, D.C., and cities across the U.S. on Saturday. Similar marches are also planned for cities in Canada.

Canadian Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, who proposed the gun-control legislatio­n last week, has pointed out, using official government statistics, that gun-related homicides in Canada are “up by two-thirds” since 2013. He recently convened a special guns and gangs meeting in Ottawa to map out possible actions to counter the trend.

The minister’s claim of higher gun crime has since been challenged by criminolog­ists and statistici­ans, who argue that 2013 was a year with the lowest homicide rate in almost 50 years and that the overall rate of firearm homicides is up but not dramatical­ly so.

Firearms are already much harder to acquire legally in Canada than in the United States, and the frequency of gun-related violence is markedly lower. But there is a long tradition of hunting and firearm ownership, particular­ly in rural parts of the country.

The previous Conservati­ve government successful­ly courted the pro-gun constituen­cy and in 2012 dismantled the decade-old firearms registry for rifles and shotguns, which was criticized by opponents as a waste of money and an intrusion into their right to hunt and shoot. Mandatory registry of handguns and other “restricted” and “prohibited” weapons remained in effect.

The Trudeau government’s proposal would force all firearms vendors to maintain records and inventorie­s of transactio­ns and keep those records for 20 years. The records would be accessible to police only if they first obtain a warrant.

Goodale said the government did not intend to revive the scrapped firearms registry and is proposing a system similar to the record-keeping required of gun sellers in the United States. But Sheldon Clare, president of the National Firearms Associatio­n, called the move the start of a process of “civil disarmamen­t” and a backdoor path to a new government registry system.

“It’s another unnecessar­y set of firearms-control regulation­s and a regime that will have nothing whatsoever to do with preventing any crimes,” Clare said on a radio station in Vancouver.

The legislatio­n would also require the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which issues firearms licenses, to examine a person’s entire life for potential problems, including criminal conviction­s. The current requiremen­t mandates a fiveyear background search.

The new law would tighten rules on transporti­ng restricted weapons, making it necessary to obtain authorizat­ion each time owners wished to take their guns anywhere other than a shooting range or club.

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