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Tanya Plibersek: Australia's strong gun laws are at risk.

In her latest column for Mamamia, Tanya Plibersek explains how our gun control laws are at risk of being watered down.

Every Australian over a certain age can remember where they were when they heard about the Port Arthur massacre in 1996. Thirty-five lives were cut tragically short.

It was a shocking event. It was not the first mass spree shooting in Australia, but it was by far the worst.

In John Howard’s best moment as Prime Minister, he used this national tragedy to do something good and noble. He dragged some meaning from the senseless loss of life at Port Arthur by making it harder to get a gun in Australia.

John Howard’s courageous gun control measures were unpopular with many, and controversial, but they have undoubtedly been successful.

While Australia still has too many murders, suicides, and threats using guns, we have not had a mass spree shooting since 1996.

We should be grateful for this brave and successful measure, and we should defend and protect our people by making sure we keep gun control strong.

We felt a little pride when John Oliver used Australia’s successful gun-control laws to satirically skewer America’s difficulty in coming to terms with the same common-sense safety measures. President Obama has cited Australia’s laws as an example of what works as he struggles to tighten gun laws in the US.

You can watch John Oliver praising Australia’s gun control here: (Post continues after video.)

We must not take our success, or our safety, for granted.

The technical elements of the National Firearms Agreement (NFA) are currently being reviewed with a view to being updated, as was recommended by the Martin Place Siege Review. As part of this, the appropriate classification of lever action shotguns, particularly those with a magazine capacity of more than five rounds, is being considered.

Under the current National Firearms Agreement, lever action shotguns with a magazine capacity of five rounds or less are a category A, which means they are available to Australia’s 700,000 licensed recreational shooters. Critics have said that technological improvements mean that new lever-action shotguns like the Adler 110, which can shoot multiple rounds in rapid succession, is faster and more powerful than other models of firearms and should require the more restrictive category C licence.

The government suspended importation of the Adler 110 with a magazine capacity of seven rounds, but agreed to allow it into Australia next year after Senator David Leyonhjelm – who thinks people who support gun control have a “psychological condition” – made it a condition of his support for the Government’s migration legislation a few months ago. Further, they are yet to stop the importation of a modified version of the gun with a magazine capacity of five.

This article by The Economist graphically demonstrates the correlation between the number of guns per head of population and the number of murders. The United States, with around three times as many civilian firearms per person as Canada, has around three times as many homicides in proportion to population, as well. And as this shows, more guns in society also means more suicides.

There is no greater responsibility of a government than to keep its people safe. Limiting and controlling access to firearms demonstrably does just that. We must not relax our vigilance or allow our laws to be undermined.

The Hon. Tanya Plibersek MP is Deputy Opposition Leader and the Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs.

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Top Comments

Actually Solve the problem 9 years ago

Such a waste of time making more rules that only say what guns the guys with licences can have. Meanwhile there are thousands of guns coming into the country ever year through unchecked containers . . . . we scan less than 1% of shipping. If you were a criminal in west Sydney I'd say knowing you have 99% chance of successfully importing an illegal gun is pretty good security to do it


PJA 9 years ago

I own guns, i shoot as often as family life permits and i do agree that rapid fire weapons should be banned in this country. The Adler 110 and all lever actions iv ever seen or heard of are about as far away from rapid fire as you can get. The reload time on those things is quite long (about 1-2 minute/s for your average range shooter and is rather cumbersome. Semi auto and automatic firearms tend to have a box clip that can easily be changed in about 5 seconds by an amature and even faster by an "average shooter". This is pure media hype and from what im reading here in the comments section, some people are buying it purely because they dont actually know anything about guns.