Los Angeles Times

Serbs give up tons of guns

An amnesty for unregister­ed weapons follows two mass shootings in a week.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

BELGRADE, Serbia — Serbians have handed in nearly 6,000 unregister­ed weapons in the first three days of a monthlong amnesty that is part of a crackdown on guns after two mass shootings last week, police said Thursday.

Police also have received nearly 300,000 rounds of ammunition and about 470 explosive devices, the Interior Ministry said on Instagram.

The effort to rid Serbia of excessive guns was launched after 17 people were killed and 21 were wounded in the two mass shootings, many of them children. One of the shootings took place in a school, for the first time ever in Serbia.

Authoritie­s have told citizens to give up unregister­ed weapons by June 8 or face prison. Other anti-gun measures include a ban on new licenses, stricter controls on gun owners and shooting ranges, and tougher punishment for the illegal possession of weapons.

The school shooter was a 13-year-old boy who used his father’s gun to open fire on his fellow students at an elementary school in central Belgrade on May 3, police said. A day later, a 20-yearold man opened fire with an automatic weapon in a rural area south of Belgrade, the capital, authoritie­s said.

Serbia is estimated to be among the top countries in Europe in gun possession per capita, partly because of the wars in the 1990s. On Wednesday, police arrested the father of the school suspect on suspicion of illegal possession of weapons.

The two shootings have sparked calls for changes and more tolerance in society.

Thousands have marched in opposition-led protests in Belgrade and other towns, demanding resignatio­ns of populist government ministers as well as a ban on television stations that air violent content and host war criminals.

President Aleksandar Vucic has accused opposition parties of using the tragedy for political ends.

Vucic, a former ultranatio­nalist who now says he wants to take Serbia into the European Union, has faced accusation­s of promoting hate speech against opponents, curbing free speech with a tight grip over mainstream media and taking control of all state institutio­ns. He denies the allegation­s.

 ?? Darko Vojinovic Associated Press ?? AN OFFICER guards the Vladislav Ribnikar school in Belgrade, the site of a mass shooting. Authoritie­s have told citizens to hand in illegal weapons or face prison.
Darko Vojinovic Associated Press AN OFFICER guards the Vladislav Ribnikar school in Belgrade, the site of a mass shooting. Authoritie­s have told citizens to hand in illegal weapons or face prison.

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