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Many Australians (765,000 or 5. Gun politics is a set of legal issues surrounding the ownership use and regulation of firearms as well as safety issues related to firearms both through their direct use and through All Firearms in Brazil are required to be registered with the state the minimum age for ownership is 25 and it is generally illegal to carry a gun outside a residence Gun politics in Canada is controversial though less contentious than it is in the United States. In Finland there are 32 privately owned firearms per 100 civilians according to the Finnish Ministry of the Interior The German Weapons Act (Waffengesetz is a gun regulation law enacted in Germany in 1972 The United Mexican States or Mexico ( Spanish: Estados Unidos Mexicanos or México) has some of the strictest Gun laws in About 230000 licensed firearms owners and hundreds of thousands of people without licences own and use New Zealand's estimated 1 See also Diplomatic and humanitarian efforts in the Somali Civil War After the Fall of Mogadishu and Kismayo In South Africa, owning a gun is conditional on a competency test and several other factors including background checking of the applicant inspection of an owners premises and licensing The gun policy in Switzerland is unique in Europe The personal weapon of militia personnel is kept at home as part of the military obligations Gun politics in the United Kingdom, much like Gun politics in Australia, places its main considerations on how best to ensure public safety and how deaths involving firearms Gun politics in the United States, incorporating the political aspects of Gun politics, and firearms rights has long been among the most controversial and intractable issues 2% of Australian adults as of August 2007[1]) own and use firearms for hunting, the control of feral animals, and target shooting. A firearm is a Tool that projects either single or multiple Projectiles at high velocity through a controlled explosion Hunting is the practice of pursuing Animals for Food, Recreation, or Trade. A feral organism is one that has escaped from Domestication and returned partly or wholly to its wild state The shooting sports include those competitive sports involving tests of proficiency (accuracy and speed using various types of Guns such as Firearms and Airguns Low levels of violent crime through much of the 20th century kept levels of Government concern about firearms low. A violent crime or crime of violence is a Crime in which the offender uses or threatens to use violent force upon the victim However, in the last two decades, following a series of mass killings and rising public concern, the Australian State Governments have, with Federal Government co-ordination, enacted more restrictive firearms legislation. This article deals with mass killings that are not considered Genocide.
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The possession and use of firearms in Australia is governed by state laws which were partly aligned by the 1996 National Firearms Agreement (see below). Anyone wishing to buy, own, or use a firearm must have a Firearms Licence and be over the age of 18, although there are exceptions. In Queensland, unlicensed individuals may use firearms legally if the proper forms are filled out beforehand. Minors, with parental consent, can use, but not legally own, firearms under a minors' licence. Applicants for a firearms licence who wish to own a firearm must have a secure safe storage unit bolted to the wall or floor or if it is used only for the storage of category A, B and/or C firearms, it must weigh more than 150kg.
For every firearm, a purchaser must obtain a Permit To Acquire. The first permit for each person has a mandatory 28 day delay before it is issued. In some states, such as Queensland, this is waived for second and subsequent firearms of the same class, whilst in others, such as New South Wales, it is not. For each firearm a "Genuine Reason" must be given, relating to pest control, hunting, target shooting, or collecting. Self-defence is not accepted as a reason for issuing a licence.
Each firearm in Australia must be registered to the owner by serial number. Some states (eg QLD and NSW) allow an owner to store or borrow another owner's firearm of the same category; others (eg WA) do not. Queensland is a state of Australia, occupying the north-eastern corner of the mainland continent Western Australia is a state occupying the entire western third of the Australian continent.
Firearms in Australia are grouped into Categories with different levels of control. The categories are:
(Participants in "approved" competitions may acquire handguns up to . 45", currently Single Action Shooting and Metallic Silhouette. Cowboy Action Shooting (CAS also known as Western Action Shooting or Single Action Shooting, is a competitive shooting sport that originated in California Metallic silhouette shooting is a group of Target shooting disciplines that involves shooting at Metal cutouts representing Game animals at varying distances IPSC shooting is not "approved" for the larger calibres, for unstated reasons. Category H barrels must be at least 100mm (3. 94") long for revolvers, and 120mm (4. 72") for semi-automatic pistols, and magazines are restricted to 10 rounds. Handgun collectors are exempt from the laws stated above. )
Antique firearms can in some states be legally bought, owned (and, in some states, used) without licences. An Antique Firearm is loosely speaking a firearm designed and manufactured prior to the beginning of the 20th century- the Boer War is often used as a cut-off event although In other states they are subject to the same requirements as modern firearms.
All single-shot muzzleloading firearms manufactured before 1 January 1901 are considered antique firearms. Four states require licences for antique percussion revolvers and cartridge repeating firearms but in Queensland and Victoria a person may possess such a firearm without a license, so long as the firearm is registered.
Australia is unusual in restricting air pistols and airsoft pistols extremely heavily. Airsoft is a modern combat Sport or recreational Hobby in which participants eliminate opponents by hitting each other with spherical non-metallic pellets All airsoft firearms must have a unique Serial number that is registered with the state and federal government. Airsoft firearms are legal in some states on a Category A licence, but only Bolt action Rifle airsoft firearms are legal for sale as well as ownership.
Firearms were first introduced to Australia with European settlement. They were used for hunting, protection of persons and crops, in crime and fighting crime, and in many military engagements. From the landing of the First Fleet on 26 January 1788 there was conflict with aborigines over game, access to fenced land, and spearing of livestock. This led to the murder of aborigines and retaliatory murders of settlers. There were a significant number of massacres of aborigines and some of settlers and explorers. This is a list of massacres of Aboriginal Australians. For discussion of the historical arguments around these conflicts see the articles on the History Wars and the Black The history of these conflicts is contentious (see History Wars). The History wars are an ongoing public debate in Australia over the interpretation of the history of the European colonisation of Australia and its impact on
Australian colonists also used firearms in conflict with bushrangers; in duels, the last in 1854; in armed rebellions, such as the Castle Hill convict rebellion in 1804 and the 1854 Eureka rebellion. This article is about a type of political territory For other uses see Colony (disambiguation. Bushrangers, or bush rangers, were Outlaws in the early years of the European settlement of Australia who had the survival skills necessary to use the As practiced from the 11th to 20th centuries in Western societies a duel is an engagement in combat between two individuals with matched weapons in accordance with their combat Rebellion is a refusal of obedienceIt may therefore be seen as encompassing a range of Behaviours from Civil disobedience and mass Nonviolent resistance The Castle Hill Rebellion of 4 March, 1804, also called the Irish Rebellion, was a large scale rebellion by Irish convicts against The Eureka Stockade was the setting of a gold miners' Revolt in 1854 near Ballarat, Victoria, Australia against the officials supervising the The Eureka Stockade in 1854 arose as a result of Government and police abuses against gold miners. The Eureka Stockade was the setting of a gold miners' Revolt in 1854 near Ballarat, Victoria, Australia against the officials supervising the A large force of police and soldiers assaulted the miners stockade. Six soldiers and twenty-two miners were killed. A strong volunteer military tradition was established, and Australians learned to value marksmanship both as a strategic military asset, and as a sport. A military is an Organization authorized by its Nation to use force usually including use of Weapons in defending its Country (or by attacking Shooting is the act or process of firing Rifles Shotguns or other projectile Weapons such as bows or Crossbows Even the firing of
From the beginning there were controls on firearms. The firearms issued to convicts (for meat hunting) and settlers (for hunting and protection) were stolen and misused, and this resulted in more controls. In January 1796, David Collins wrote that 'several attempts had been made to ascertain the number of arms in the possession of individuals, as many were feared to be in the hands of those who committed depredations; the crown recalled between two and three hundred stands of arms, but not 50 stands were accounted for'. [2]
From the 1850s to the 1950s, Australians developed a strong volunteer tradition in preparing defence against possible invaders, and sent volunteer expeditionary forces to most British wars. From this arose an enthusiastic civil marksmanship movement, a form of military reserve supported under the Defence Act until as late as 1996. The movement exists to this day in the fullbore Rifle Clubs affiliated with the State and National Rifle Associations of Australia. [3] The highest trophy shows the significance of this sport to the nation: the Queen's Prize.
Game animals, in particular rabbits and kangaroos, provided an important source of food and income for rural Australians. In Australia, Rabbits are the most serious Mammalian pests, an Invasive species whose destruction of habitats is responsible for A kangaroo is a Marsupial from the family Macropodidae (macropods meaning 'large foot' From settlement through into the 1970s Australian and immigrant families developed new land farms, and hunting provided security of food supply in sometimes desperate economic circumstances.
Gun laws were the responsibility of each Colony and since Federation in 1901, of each State. The Commonwealth has no constitutional authority in this area, but it controls imports and military matters, and the external affairs power can be used to enforce internal control over matters agreed in external treaties.
Through the 1920s; Australia, Canada and Great Britain were concerned about the rise of Communism in light of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, and imposed restrictions on handguns[4]. Communism is a Socioeconomic structure that promotes the establishment of an egalitarian, classless, stateless Society based The October Revolution (Октябрьская революция Oktyabrskaya revolyutsiya) also known as the Soviet Revolution Russia (Россия Rossiya) or the Russian Federation ( Rossiyskaya Federatsiya) is a transcontinental Country extending These restrictions have increased over the succeeding decades. In New South Wales, handguns were effectively banned after World War II but the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games sparked a new interest in the sport of pistol shooting and laws were changed to allow the sport to develop. World War II, or the Second World War, (often abbreviated WWII) was a global military conflict which involved a majority of the world's nations, including The Olympic Games is an international Multi-sport event established for both summer and winter games
Rifles and shotguns were considerably less restricted in Australia. A rifle is a Firearm designed to be fired from the shoulder with a barrel that has a helical groove or pattern of grooves ("rifling" cut into the barrel walls A shotgun (also known as a scattergun) is a Firearm that is usually designed to be fired from the shoulder which uses the energy of a fixed shell to fire a number State gun laws varied widely. In Western Australia and the Northern Territory restrictions were severe even for sporting rifles and shotguns, while in Queensland and Tasmania longarms could be bought without restrictions.
Fully-automatic arms have been banned in the Australian mainland since the 1930s, but remained legal in Tasmania until 1996.
In the 1940s and 1950s, Cold War concerns about ex-military rifles falling into the hands of communist radicals led a number of states to place restrictions on the legal ownership of rifles of a military calibre while at the same time, allowed firearm owners who are members of rifle clubs and military rifle clubs to own ex-military rifles. Cold War is the state of conflict tension and competition that existed between the United States and the Soviet Union (USSR and their respective allies from the Communism is a Socioeconomic structure that promotes the establishment of an egalitarian, classless, stateless Society based The term caliber or calibre designates the interior Diameter of a tube or the exterior diameter of a wire or rod The Australian state of New South Wales is a prime example of these laws that were introduced in Australia during the 1940s and 1950s. In the 1970s and 1980s these restrictions were relaxed and military style rifles (both bolt-action and semi-automatic) once again became widely available except in Western Australia and the Northern Territory.
By the 1980s, the relative popularity of shooting and the prevalence of firearms in the community began to fall as social attitudes changed and urbanisation increased. Urbanizationn (also spelled urbanisation) is the physical growth of Urban areas into rural or natural land as a result of population in-migration to an existing
From 1984 to 1996, multiple killings focused public attention on guns. The 1984 Milperra massacre was a major incident in a series of conflicts between various 'outlaw motorcycle gangs'. The Milperra Massacre was the name of an incident which occurred on Father's Day 1984 or September 2nd 1984 in Milperra, a south-western suburb of Sydney A motorcycle club (MC is an organized club of dedicated Motorcyclists who join together for Camaraderie, strength of numbers companionship education rider training (These gangs are a major component of organised crime in Australia and continue to arm themselves illegally. ) In 1987, the Hoddle Street massacre and the Queen Street massacre took place in Melbourne. Year 1987 ( MCMLXXXVII) was a Common year starting on Thursday (link displays 1987 Gregorian calendar) The Hoddle Street massacre is the name given to a mass murder that occurred on the evening of Sunday August 9, 1987 in Hoddle Street, Clifton Hill The Queen Street massacre was a Murder-suicide that occurred on December 8, 1987 at the Australia Post offices in Melbourne, Melbourne ( is the second most populous city in Australia, with a Metropolitan area population of approximately 3 In response, several states required the registration of all guns, and restricted the availability of self-loading rifles and shotguns. This article is about a firearm action For the article about the specific rifle see L1A1 SLR (Self-Loading Rifle A self-loading rifle is a Rifle The Strathfield massacre followed in New South Wales in 1991, where two were killed with a knife, then five more with a firearm. The Strathfield massacre was a shooting rampage in Sydney, Australia on Saturday August 17, 1991. Tasmania passed a law in 1991 for firearm purchasers to obtain a license, though enforcement was light. Firearm laws in Tasmania and Queensland remained relatively relaxed for longarms. Tasmania is an Australian island and state of the same name It is located south of the eastern side of the Continent, being separated from it by Bass Queensland is a state of Australia, occupying the north-eastern corner of the mainland continent In 1995, Tasmania had the second lowest rate of homicides per head of population.
Shooting massacres in Australia and other English-speaking countries often occurred close together. Forensic psychiatrists attribute this to copycat behaviour,[5][6] which is in many cases triggered by sensational media treatment. [7][8] Mass murderers study media reports and imitate the actions and equipment that are sensationalised in them. [9]
The Port Arthur massacre in 1996 transformed gun control thinking in Australia. The Port Arthur massacre of 28 April 1996 was a killing spree which claimed the lives of 35 people and wounded 37 others mainly at the historic Year 1996 ( MCMXCVI) was a Leap year starting on Monday (link will display full 1996 Gregorian calendar) Thirty five people were killed when Martin Bryant opened fire on tourists with two military-style semi-automatic rifles: an AR-15 and an L1A1 SLR. Martin John Bryant (born 7 May 1967) murdered 35 people and injured 19 others in the Port Arthur massacre, a killing spree in Tasmania AR-15 (for Ar malite model 15, often mistaken for A utomatic R ifle is the common name for the widely-owned semi-automatic The Fusil Automatique Léger (Light Automatic Rifle or FAL is a 7 These weapons were of a type that was legal to possess in Tasmania at the time, but Bryant was ineligible for a firearm license and acquired the firearms illegally.
The massacre of 35 people at the notorious former convict prison at Port Arthur just weeks after the Dunblane massacre in Scotland traumatised the Australian community. Port Arthur is a small town and former convict settlement on the Tasman Peninsula, in Tasmania, Australia. The Dunblane massacre was a multiple Murder-suicide which occurred at Dunblane Primary School in the Scottish town of Dunblane on 13 March 1996 As the Australian Constitution required each Australian State and Territory to enact gun laws, Prime Minister John Howard, then newly elected, took existing gun reform proposals (drafted by Police Ministers meetings since the report of the 1988 National Committee on Violence [10]) to enact much tighter firearm controls. Public feeling after the Port Arthur shootings overwhelmed the opposition from gun owners' organisations and sweeping changes were enacted in all states. This included mandatory gun licences, registration of all firearms, and a near-complete ban on all semi-automatic rifles and shotguns, and all pump-action shotguns. Some farmers and professional cullers could own certain semi-automatic rifles and shotguns but most licenced firearm owners (including international sports shooters) were banned from legally acquiring and owning these firearms for recreational target shooting and hunting.
There was a heated public debate, between those who believed guns should be removed, and those who believed the proposed laws would be ineffective and overly restrictive for the legal firearm owners affected by the ban. The governments of two states, Tasmania and Queensland, objected to some of the changes, causing John Howard to threaten them with a constitutional referendum to transfer power over gun laws to the federal government. In Australia referendums are binding polls usually used to alter the constitution of the Commonwealth or a state or territory This article describes the federal government of Australia See Australian governments for other jurisdictions The Federal Government also threatened to cut off federal funding to the states and territories and retract its offer to help the states extinguish Native Title claims if they didn't support the proposed laws. The Commonwealth of Australia is made up of 8 states and territories controlled under a federal system of government Native title is a concept in the Law of Australia that recognises in certain cases there was and is a continued beneficial legal interest in land held by local Indigenous Opinion polls taken at the time indicated support for even more gun restrictions. Faced with the force of public opinion which could have carried the referendum, the two objecting states were forced to agree without any compromises or concessions to the new laws, which were duly enacted.
There was a series of public meetings to persuade farmers and sporting shooters to accept the proposed changes. In the first of these, Mr. Howard, acting on the advice of his ministers, wore a bullet-resistant vest whilst addressing the meeting. A ballistic vest is an item of protective clothing that absorbs the impact from gun-fired Projectiles and shrapnel fragments from explosion The vest was visible in photographs and this led to an outcry from gun supporters who condemned Mr. Howard for implying that civilian gun-owners were dangerous. In response, the Hon. I. Cohen stated ". . . It would have been irresponsible of him had he not heeded the advice of those who said he should protect himself. "[11]
The American National Rifle Association's, move to support Australian gun advocates was roundly condemned by Australian Federal Attorney General Daryl Williams. The National Rifle Association, or NRA, is a non-profit ( 501(c(4) group dedicated to the protection of the Second Amendment of the [12]
The Federal Government put a 1% levy on income tax for one year to finance the "buy back" purchase and destruction of all semi-automatic rifles including . This article describes the federal government of Australia See Australian governments for other jurisdictions 22 rimfires, semi-automatic shotguns and pump-action shotguns. Although only one state published statistics, it appears that 5% of the destroyed guns were of the military style, the remainder being sporting and farmers' working firearms. The high cost ($A500 million) of this exercise raised opposition from shooter groups, such as the Sporting Shooters Association of Australia, which argued that the "buy back" had failed to improve public safety. The Sporting Shooters' Association of Australia (SSAA was established in 1948 to promote Shooting sports and protect Firearm owners' interests [13]
Laws remained static until 2002, when a pistol-owning international student killed two fellow students at Monash University in Victoria. The Monash University shooting refers to a shooting in which a student shot his classmates and teacher killing two and injuring five See also 2002 (disambiguation Year 2002 ( MMII) was a Common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. Monash University is a Public university based in Melbourne, Australia. This prompted a re-examination of existing handgun laws, although some remained angry that a non-citizen had obtained a license and so many firearms in the short period alleged.
As in 1996, the federal government prompted state governments to review handgun laws, and, as a result, amended legislation was adopted in all states and territories. The Parliaments of the Australian states and territories are legislative bodies within the federal framework of the Commonwealth of Australia. Key changes included a 10-round magazine capacity limit, a calibre limit of not more than . A magazine is an Ammunition storage and feeding device within or attached to a repeating Firearm. 38 inches (9. Inches redirects here To see the Les Savy Fav album see Inches. 65 mm), a firearm barrel length limit of not less than 120 mm (4. The metre or meter is a unit of Length. It is the basic unit of Length in the Metric system and in the International For the fictional characters see Gunbarrel (Transformers. A gun barrel is the tube usually Metal, through which a controlled Explosion 72 inches) for semi-automatic pistols and 100 mm (3. A semi-automatic pistol is a type of Handgun that can be fired in semi-automatic mode firing one cartridge for each pull of the trigger 94 inches) for revolvers, and more strict sporting requirements for handgun purchases. Whilst handguns for sporting shooters are nominally restricted to . 38 inches as a maximum calibre, it is possible to obtain an endorsement allowing calibres up to . 45 inches (11. 43 mm) to be used for Metallic Silhouette or Single Action Shooting matches. Metallic silhouette shooting is a group of Target shooting disciplines that involves shooting at Metal cutouts representing Game animals at varying distances These new laws were opposed by sporting shooters groups.
The new changes had an enormous impact on attitudes to gun ownership in Australia. Due to the universal registration of pistols and their owners, affected shooters complied, and were often able to change magazines and barrels to comply with the new legislation. One of the government policies was to compensate shooters for giving up the sport. Approximately 25% of pistol shooters took this offer, and relinquished their licenses and their right to own pistols for sport. This compensated confiscation was criticised by sporting shooters groups. In the state of Victoria $A21 million was spent "buying back" 18,124 firearms, while in the same period Victorians imported 15,184 firearms to replace their confiscated target pistols.
Historically, Australia has had relatively low levels of violent crime. Overall levels of homicide and suicide have remained relatively static for several decades, while the proportion of these crimes that involved firearms has consistently declined since the early 1980s. List of countries by homicide rate Homicide ( Latin homicidium, homo human being + caedere to cut kill refers to the act of killing another Between 1991 and 2001, the number of firearm related deaths in Australia declined 47%. [14]
In 1997, the Prime Minister appointed the Australian Institute of Criminology to analyse of the effects of the gun buyback. Since then, a number of papers have been published reporting trends and statistics around legal gun ownership and gun crime, which they have found to be mostly related to illegally-held firearms. [15][16] In 2003, a sporting shooters' organisation argued that no benefit-cost analysis of the "buyback" has been published. [17] In 2007, researchers at the Australian National University reported "There were on average 250 fewer firearm deaths per year after the implementation of the National Firearms Agreement than would have been expected," There was a reduction in both murders and suicides. This report criticised an earlier report from two shooters' organisations on methodological grounds,[18]. The Sporting Shooters' Association of Australia disputes these claims.
The Sporting Shooters Association of Australia argues that there is no evidence that in gun control restrictions in 1987, 1996 and 2002 had any impact on this already established trend. The Sporting Shooters' Association of Australia (SSAA was established in 1948 to promote Shooting sports and protect Firearm owners' interests [19][20] An interpretation of the statistics by the head of the New South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, Don Weatherburn,[21] noted that the level of legal gun ownership in New South Wales increased in recent years. In 2006, the lack of any measurable effect from the 1996 firearms legislation was confirmed using a statistical method (ARIMA), in a peer-reviewed article in the British Journal of Criminology by academics Dr Jeanine Baker (SSAA) and Dr Samara McPhedran (Women in Shooting and Hunting). In Statistics, an autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA model is a generalisation of an Autoregressive moving average or (ARMA model [22] Prominent Australian criminologist Don Weatherburn described the Baker & McPhedran article as "reputable" and "well-conducted" and stated that the available data are insufficient to draw stronger conclusions. [23] Weatherburn noted the importance of policing illegal firearm possession and argued that it should not be necessarily concluded that relaxing restrictions would not affect the homicide rate. [24]
In June 2007, economists Christine Neill and Andrew Leigh from the Australian National University reported that there were several methodological flaws in the Baker & McPhedran study, showing that the reductions in both murders and suicides were statistically significant, [25] contrary to the claims of the previous study.
Some researchers have claimed a dramatic effect on firearm deaths, by counting the drop in firearm suicides and ignoring a corresponding rise in non-firearm suicides. One such author is Ozanne-Smith et el. (2004) in the journal Injury Prevention[26].
A study co-authored by Professor Simon Chapman, former convenor of the Coalition for Gun Control, argued that the laws have prevented mass shootings, pointing out in the 18 years prior to the Port Arthur massacre there were 13 mass shootings and in the decade since 1996 there have been none. [27]. However, there is no reliable statistical evidence to support this claim.
In the year 2002/2003, over 85% of firearms used to commit murder were unregistered. [28] In 1997-1999, more than 80% of the handguns confiscated were never legally purchased or registered in Australia. [15] Knives are used up to 3 times as often as firearms in robberies. [29] The majority of firearm related deaths involved the use of hunting rifles, with their share being most pronounced in firearm suicides. [14]
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics [2], in 1985-2000, 78% of firearm deaths in Australia were suicides, yet only 5% of suicides involved firearms. The suicide rate has only fluctuated, not statistically changed, from 1993-2003. However, recent published studies such as www. gunfacts. be [3] indicate an important increase of the suicide rate for adult men, in the 3 years after the introduction of the strict gun legislation. In the 5 years following the introduction of the strict gun legislation, 427 extra suicides took place compared to the suicide rate of 1996.
The number of guns stolen has fallen dramatically from 4,000 per year[16] to 664 in a six-month period in 2005[30]. This is because of efforts by police and shooting bodies to encourage secure storage of guns. Long guns are more often stolen opportunistically in home burglaries, but few homes have handguns and a substantial proportion of stolen handguns are taken from security firms and other businesses. Only a tiny proportion, 0. 06% of licensed firearms, are stolen in a given year, and while only a small proportion of those firearms are recovered, only about 3% will afterward be connected to an actual crime.
Concern has been raised about the number of smuggled pistols reaching Australia, particularly in New South Wales.
Firearms laws are the responsibility of State Governments, and usually these Governments act on the recommendations of their Police services in firearms matters. Before 1996, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia all had different laws, no licence was needed for long guns in Queensland, and licences were only introduced for long guns in Tasmania in 1991. Western Australia and the Northern Territory had severe restrictions, especially on centrefire semi-automatic firearms.
Since 1996 all States subscribe to the National Agreement on Firearms (NAF). The NAF was instituted through the Australian Police Ministers Conference, as a Federal intervention over-riding major differences in State laws.
The Federal Government under the Coalition strongly favoured gun control and, legislation has steadily become more restrictive. Despite his strong support for the USA on many other issues, former Australian Prime Minister John Howard frequently referred to the USA to explain his opposition to civilian firearms ownership and use in Australia. The United States of America —commonly referred to as the He has often said in interviews and prepared speeches that he does not want Australia to go "down the American path". [31][32][33] In one interview on Sydney radio station 2GB he said "we will find any means we can to further restrict them because I hate guns. 2GB is a commercial Radio station in Sydney, Australia broadcasting on 873 KHz, AM. . . ordinary citizens should not have weapons. We do not want the American disease imported into Australia". [34] In a television interview shortly before the tenth anniversary of the Port Arthur massacre, he reaffirmed his stance: "I did not want Australia to go down the American path. There are some things about America I admire and there are some things I don't. And one of the things I don't admire about America is their. . . slavish love of guns. They're evil". [35] During the same television interview, Prime Minister Howard also stated that he saw the outpouring of grief in the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre as "an opportunity to grab the moment and think about a fundamental change to gun laws in this country". On the day before the anniversary, as media attention intensified, Howard publicly foreshadowed the possibility of further restrictions on legal handgun ownership. [36].
Gun control has been a source of some friction between the National Party and the Liberal Party, who together formed the coalition Federal Government from 1996 to 2007. The National Party of Australia is an Australian political party. The Liberal Party of Australia is an Australian political party. The Coalition in Australian politics refers to a pragmatic grouping of Centre-right parties that has existed in the form of a coalition agreement since 1922 The National Party has strong support from rural voters, some of whom are opposed to the Federal government's moves towards gun control. The 1996 National Firearms Agreement has been attributed with causing the defeat of the National Party in the 1998 Queensland elections, leading to the rise of the One Nation Party. Not to be confused with the One Nation program of infrastructure works carried out from 1991 to 1996 by the Keating Labor Government [37]
In the November 2007 Federal election, the Australian Labor Party replaced the Liberal Party in government. The new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has personally indicated his support for the shooting sports (due to Rudd being a former clay target shooter and the Belmont shooting complex being located within Rudd's Brisbane electorate) but Labor's direction as a whole remains to be seen. Kevin Michael Rudd (born 21 September 1957 is the 26th and current Prime Minister of Australia and federal leader of the Centre-left Australian Labor
Gun control groups in Australia gain membership immediately after killing sprees but may lose membership at other times. The main focus of these groups is aimed at tightening firearm controls - e. g. , lobbying for photo gun licences in Queensland [4] - reducing levels of gun ownership and reducing the number of firearm-related deaths in Australia. One argument for further gun control is that violent gun crimes could be prevented by bans on the ownership of certain types, makes and models of firearms and would reduce the chances of both domestic murders and mass-shootings, thereby making the community safer.
Active lobbying in Australia is conducted by two main groups: Melbourne based Gun Control Australia and the Sydney based National Coalition for Gun Control (NCGC). The most recent written material comes from Ms. Samantha Lee, who was until 2006 the chair of the NCGC. Her main written contribution to gun control debate is her Churchill fellowship report [38]. In it she argued that current handgun legislation is too loose. She cited statistics showing that handgun crime is rising, and that the types of handguns used in crime are legally available. Lee also argued that police officers who enjoy recreational shooting have a conflict of interest, and that licensed private firearm ownership per se presents a threat to women, and children in particular. A conflict of interest is a situation in which someone in a position of trust such as a Lawyer, Insurance adjuster, a Politician, executive or director [39] Ms Lee was joined by Mr Roland Browne as the co-chair of the NCGC, apparently in late 2005 or early 2006. In April 2006, around the tenth anniversary of the Port Arthur Massacre, Browne advocated further restrictions on handguns. [40][41] Previous chairs of the NCGC include Rebecca Peters[42] and Tim Costello[43]
The NCGC has no website or public contact details and does not solicit public membership. Rebecca Peters is the Director of the International Action Network on Small Arms ( IANSA) Timothy Ewen Costello, AO (born March 4, 1955) is a prominent Baptist minister, director of World Vision Australia Gun Control Australia maintains a website and has an office in Ross House in Flinders Lane in Melbourne.
While shooting clubs have existed in Australia since the mid 1800s, their activity in the political arena is mostly in response to increasing restrictions. Firearms advocacy is mainly concerned with protecting the viability of hunting and the shooting sports, rather than keeping firearms for self-defence. Hunting is the practice of pursuing Animals for Food, Recreation, or Trade. The shooting sports include those competitive sports involving tests of proficiency (accuracy and speed using various types of Guns such as Firearms and Airguns
In Australia, firearm advocacy organisations have never approached the strength of the National Rifle Association in the United States and political sympathisers are quite discreet in their support.
Australian shooters typically feel that their sport is under permanent threat from increasingly restrictive legislation. John Howard in particular was frequently portrayed, especially in shooters' literature, as having a vendetta against shooters and legal gun ownership in general. See also Howard Government John Winston Howard AC (born 26 July 1939 was the 25th Prime Minister of Australia from 11 March Shooters have often argued that licensed firearm owners were made scapegoats by politicians, the media, and the anti-gun movement for the acts of criminals, most often committed with illegal firearms. scapegoat was a Goat that was driven off into the wilderness as part of the ceremonies of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement in Judaism during the times Firearms advocacy groups argue that there is no evidence that increasing restrictions have improved public safety, despite the high financial costs and regulatory barriers imposed on shooters in Australia. Public security Public safety involves the prevention of and protection from events that could endanger the Safety of the general public from significant Danger
Firearms advocacy groups are active in debating gun control policy in the public arena. For instance, Dr. Jeanine Baker of the Sporting Shooters Association of Australia (SSAA) stated that Samantha Lee's Churchill Report (above) contained numerous factual errors,[44] and ignored the Australian Institute of Criminology data indicating that 85% of firearms homicides were committed with illegally-held firearms. [45] This and other similar statistics are central to the position of shooters who argue that efforts to reduce firearms crime by restricting the lawful possession of firearms are misdirected.
The largest organisation of firearms owners is the Sporting Shooters Association of Australia. The Sporting Shooters' Association of Australia (SSAA was established in 1948 to promote Shooting sports and protect Firearm owners' interests There are also a number of other groups which cater for different markets, such as Field and Game Australia, the National Rifle Association of Australia. Other organisations such as Target Rifle Victoria, Victorian Amateur Pistol Association and the Victorian Clay Target Association have produced medal winning performances at the Olympics in shotgun, and in the Commonwealth Games in rifle, pistol and shotgun.
The Combined Firearms Council of Victoria was created a month before the 2002 Victorian State Election after a double murder at Monash University which saw a clampdown on handguns, and ran advertisements in that election. It secured the establishment of the Firearms Consultative Committee in 2005 which oversaw several changes to firearms legislation that benefited handgun users and gun collectors.
It made voting recommendations at the 2002 Victorian State Election and the 2006 Victorian State Election. The landslide victory of the Australian Labor Party in 2002 made it difficult to provide a meaningful analysis of the impact of the shooters' vote. The CFCV supported a number of specific candidates rather than certain political parties, including four of the six ALP MPs elevated to the front bench after the election.
In addition, other activist groups such as the New South Wales based Coalition of Law Abiding Sporting Shooters (CLASS) and Women in Shooting and Hunting (WISH) engage in activism on behalf of firearms ownership. CLASS was formed to overcome a perceived limitation in the major organisations, which are primarily sporting associations.
The Shooters Party is a political party in New South Wales that states it "represent[s] the rights of law abiding firearms owners and users". The Shooters Party is an Australian state political party It is registered for state elections in New South Wales, Victoria [46] Its founder, John Tingle, served as an elected member of the upper house of New South Wales parliament, the Legislative Council, from 1995 until he retired in late 2006. The New South Wales Legislative Council, or upper house is one of the two chambers of the parliament of New South Wales in Australia. The party currently holds two seats in the Legislative Council.
A number of minor political parties such as Liberal Democratic Party of Australia, Outdoor Recreation Party, One Nation Party and Country Alliance have had candidates who have supported firearm usage more overtly than the majority of candidates belonging to the major parties. The Liberty & Democracy Party (LDP is a moderate libertarian or classical liberal Australian Political party founded in 2001. The Outdoor Recreation Party is a minor Political party in Australia. Not to be confused with the One Nation program of infrastructure works carried out from 1991 to 1996 by the Keating Labor Government The Country Alliance is a minor political party in the state of Victoria, Australia.
Weapons Act 1990 (Qld)
Weapons Regulation 1996 (Qld)
Weapons Categories Regulation 1997 (Qld)