Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Wellington pledges gun law reforms

- Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

MELBOURNE/AUCKLAND: New Zealand is normally peaceful and calm - and has plenty of guns.

New Zealand’s reputation as a safe country, where even police are mostly unarmed, belies easy access to weapons and a private firearm ownership rate among the highest in the world.

That has been thrown into the spotlight by the killing of 49 people by a terrorist rampaging through t wo Christchur­ch mosques with an arsenal of highpowere­d guns.

It has prompted an immediate promise of stricter gun laws from Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, who s ai d t hat t he mosque attacker was a licensed gun owner and that five firearms were used during the rampage, including two semi-automatic weapons and two shotguns.

The weapons also appeared to have been modified, Ardern told reporters in Christchur­ch on Saturday.

“That’s a challenge that we will look to address in changing our laws,” she said.

Rules in New Zealand require gun owners to be licensed, but unlike neighbouri­ng Australia, laws do not require all weapons to be registered, giving authoritie­s poor oversight of the coun- try’s firearms, according to GunPolicy.org.

“The police don’t have a clue how many guns there really are in New Zealand,” said Philip Alpers, an Australia-based expert in gun laws and director of Gunpolicy.org.

He said New Zealand, with a population of just under five million, had an estimated 1.5 million firearms.

Military-style semi-automatic rifles, which are banned in neighbouri­ng Australia, are permitted in New Zealand but must be registered.

New Zealand is reportedly moving towards banning semiautoma­tic rifles, attorney-general David Parker said.

Parker was meeting a vigil group at the Auckland’s Aotea Square. “There is a dimming of enlightenm­ent in many parts of the world,” he lamented.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Akhtar, who says her husband went missing after Friday's attacks, cries near al-noor mosque.
REUTERS Akhtar, who says her husband went missing after Friday's attacks, cries near al-noor mosque.
 ?? REUTERS ?? A woman reacts at a tribute area in Christchur­ch.
REUTERS A woman reacts at a tribute area in Christchur­ch.
 ?? REUTERS ?? Australian terrorist Brenton Tarrant makes a sign for photograph­ers in the Christchur­ch district court on Saturday.
REUTERS Australian terrorist Brenton Tarrant makes a sign for photograph­ers in the Christchur­ch district court on Saturday.

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