BFF-15 New Zealand shooters back gun control after massacre

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New Zealand shooters back gun control after massacre

WELLINGTON, April 1, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – New Zealand will crack down on
firearms ownership this week after the Christchurch mosques massacre that
claimed 50 lives — and the Kiwi gun lobby, for the most part, is okay with
that.

In stark contrast to the United States, where even the most minor curbs on
gun ownership meet ferocious opposition led by the National Rifle
Association, New Zealand gun owners agree action is needed.

The March 15 rampage by a white supremacist gunman has been a shock to the
collective system.

“We want to support our government in any changes to prevent a terrorist
attack from happening in New Zealand again,” Nicole McKee, secretary of the
Council of Licensed Firearm Owners said.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s government announced an immediate ban on
military-style semi-automatic rifles (MSSAs) after the shooting and will put
laws to parliament formalising its action on Tuesday.

Finalising such legislation can often take months but Ardern says the
matter is so urgent it will be done by April 11.

Further curbs — potentially including a gun register, tighter vetting and
stricter gun storage rules — are set to be passed by the end of the year.

In a move that would be unthinkable in the United States, one of New
Zealand’s largest gun retailers, Hunting & Fishing, voluntarily stopped
selling MSSAs and halted online firearms sales.

“Such weapons of war have no place in our business — or our country,”
chief executive Darren Jacobs said.

New Zealand has its own National Rifle Association, but since the shooting,
it has been at pains to point out it is a small sporting organisation, not a
wealthy political lobby group like its American counterpart.

“Our members shoot with single-shot bolt action rifles at paper targets,”
president Malcolm Dodson said.

Another office holder has told media the New Zealand NRA is considering
changing its name to avoid any association with the American body.

On the surface, New Zealand and the United States share many historical
similarities, but they have a fundamentally different attitude towards
firearms.

Both are former British colonies that fought bitter wars against indigenous
populations and forged an individualistic frontier mentality.

However, statistics highlight the difference.

In 2016, New Zealand, with a population of about 4.7 million, had nine
firearms-related homicides.

In the United States, population approximately 327 million, there were
14,415, more than two hundred times the per capita rate as New Zealand.

– A privilege or a right? –

There are approximately 393 million guns in private hands in the United
States, or 1.2 for every person, whereas New Zealand has about 1.5 million,
or 0.3 per person.

The New Zealand government believes there are 13,500 MSSAs in the country,
while estimates put the number in the US at 15 million.

Philip Alperts, a gun policy researcher at the University of Sydney, said
the crucial difference between New Zealand and the United States was the US
Constitution’s Second Amendment, which guarantees the right to keep and bear
arms.

Alperts, himself a Kiwi, said countries such as New Zealand viewed gun
ownership as a privilege, while in America it was seen as an inalienable
right.

“We have a population who, when they travelled to America would get off the
plane and be absolutely horrified to see people walking around with a gun,”
he said, adding that safety was at the centre of New Zealand gun culture.

Journalist Dawn Picken covered scores of shooting deaths in the United
States and once had bullets lodged in her bedroom when a random gunman opened
fire on her apartment building in Spokane, Washington state.

She said she had found a different mindset since moving to New Zealand in
2011.

“It was quite refreshing as an American to come here and hear Kiwis who own
guns say ‘I don’t think they should be easy to get and it’s not my right,
they should check I’m not predisposed to violence or going to go off the
rails,” she said.

– ‘Semi-automatic trifles’ –

However, like anywhere, New Zealand has a vocal fringe element.

“Tyrant Prime Minister Kills Sports Shooting,” screams the headline on one
prominent pro-gun website.

But former police minister Judith Collins had a blunt message for the US
NRA and any other gun lobbyists who tried to inject themselves into New
Zealand’s gun control debate: “Bugger off.”

The difference in gun cultures has played out on social media since the
Christchurch shooting.

When a right-wing US website tweeted that “armed government thugs” were
carrying out door-to-door gun confiscations in New Zealand, dozens of Kiwis
left mocking replies.

“I had a self-saucing dessert in my pantry,” said one. “The cops came for
it in the dead of night — apparently we aren’t allowed semi-automatic
trifles.”

BSS/AFP/GMR/0935 hrs