Edmonton Journal

Conservati­ves quietly defer gun-marking rules

- BRUCE CHEADLE

OTTAWA – The Conservati­ve government has quietly shelved rules on serial numbers for guns that would have helped keep Canada in compliance with its internatio­nal convention­s on arms smuggling.

The decision came through an order-in-council — a cabinet decree — that was not formally announced by the Harper government but has been posted among dozens of other orders on the Privy Council Office website.

A single paragraph on the website states the long-delayed regulation­s, which were scheduled to come into force on Dec. 1, “are being deferred.”

A spokeswoma­n for Public Safety Minister Vic Toews confirmed, following an inquiry by The Canadian Press, that the regulation­s have been pushed off to December 2013.

However, Toews’ spokeswoma­n, Julie Carmichael, would not comment on why the gun lobby was apparently told of the move more than a month ago — even though the order-in-council decision was approved only last week — and why no news release accompanie­d the policy change.

Earlier this fall, the government posted the rule changes in the Canada Gazette, signalling it was finally going to make good on gun-marking regulation­s that were first announced in 2004.

Some gun enthusiast­s objected to the regulation­s because they said they would increase costs for manufactur­ers, who would pass the increase on to gun buyers.

The government noted in October that the repeal of the long-gun registry has created a gap in Canada’s internatio­nal obligation­s with regard to two protocols on arms smuggling.

The Gazette notice said ensuring most firearms in Canada had unique serial numbers would “meet some of the specificat­ions” of those internatio­nal protocols.

Regulating unique serial numbers on weapons — which most reputable gun makers already do routinely — helps national government­s track the smuggling of black-market arms.

But the Canadian government’s stated reasons for marking weapons went further.

A background­er in the Canada Gazette said the “rationale” for the new rules was to aid police investigat­ions.

“The proposal would establish basic marking requiremen­ts to facilitate the identifica­tion of firearms and to contribute to public safety, by facilitati­ng law enforcemen­t investigat­ions when the markings can be linked to informatio­n on the last legal owner of the firearm,” said the Public Safety document.

Toews’ spokeswoma­n said in an email Wednesday that the Conservati­ve government “is focused on effective solutions to tackle crime, not billion dollar boondoggle­s.”

“Our government intends to defer the UN marking regulation­s for one year to consult on the best solution for law-abiding Canadian gun owners,” Carmichael wrote.

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