p. A15
In the early morning hours of Saturday, Aug. 7, Winnipeg police officers
heard a shot outside the downtown Orpheum nightclub, then -- according to
the post-incident police report -- "observed a female armed with a
handgun
getting into a nearby 2003 Chrysler Sebring [and] initiated a pursuit which
travelled through the downtown area reaching speeds of 100 km/hr."
When the suspect turned into oncoming traffic, officers broke off the chase,
but not before they witnessed the driver tossing a loaded .38-calibre
revolver out the window.
Police recovered the pistol and have since charged two women -- the
28-year-old Sebring driver and a 20-year-old passenger -- with weapons
offences.
When briefing the media later, Winnipeg Police Constable Shelly Glover
conceded: "We're certainly seeing more and more firearms in the
street."
More firearms!? In the street? How can this be?
We are currently in the sixth full year of operation of the federal
Liberals' universal gun registry, which Canadians were assured was going to
choke off gun crime and encourage a "culture of safety."
Yet police officers are noticing that despite more than a billion dollars
spent on making duck hunters from North Bay, Kamloops and Doaktown register
their shotguns, gun threats are on the rise.
Toronto is in the midst of its second year of unprecedented gunplay on its
streets. Most of this is drug-related, but as the police shooting of Tony
Brookes outside Toronto's Union Station Tuesday reemphasized, the rise in
gun violence is not limited to gangster-on-gangster shootings.
After beating his estranged wife in the nearby TD Centre, Brookes took a
20-year-old bank intern hostage outside the train station, one of the
busiest sidewalks in the country, during rush hour.
Brookes was already under a court-ordered ban against firearms possession.
To top it off, he had an illegal gun (a sawed-off shotgun), that cannot be
possessed even if registered.
No registry in the world can keep the Tony Brookeses from getting guns; no
social engineering can deter a distraught man on the edge bent on killing or
being killed.
Nor are drug dealers and smugglers going to register the tools of their
violent trade. If they're prepared to violate the Criminal Code's sanctions
against selling illegal drugs, who could have possibly thought for a second
they would agonize over whether or not to honour administrative edicts to
register their automatic handguns?
And as the almost-casual gun incident in Winnipeg earlier this month shows,
the registry cannot keep an increasing number of bar-hoppers and young
people on the societal fringes from acquiring guns, either. There is
undoubtedly some cachet in certain circles to owning a gun when the
suits-and-ties are so hell-bent on keeping you from having one.
We know from Statistics Canada that since the gun registry began operations
in 1998, family homicides with firearms are up nearly one-third and spousal
homicides have risen by nearly one-quarter, despite former justice minister
Allan Rock's 1995 promise to Parliament that "registration will assist us
to
deal with the scourge of domestic violence."
We also know, from the same source, that since the registry commenced,
overall suicides, by all methods, are up over 20%. When I wrote this here
nearly three months ago, several gun control fans responded that suicides by
firearms had fallen. But so what? Is one kind of suicide more tragic than
another? It is in no way a triumph for the registry that it has encouraged
anguished people to end their lives with ropes, razor blades and pills
rather than rifles.
The registry has saved no lives, prevented no crimes.
But let's play the Liberals' game for a moment and assume gun registration
could be an effective tool against street crime, domestic violence and
suicide. For any registry to achieve these ends, it would have to know 99%
of the gun owners and know where 99% of the guns are.
For more than three years, Ottawa has insisted over 90% of gun owners have
acquired federal licences and that well over 90% of guns have been
registered. Yet as Saskatchewan Conservative MP Garry Breitkreuz discovered
this week, the government's own internal numbers indicate that at least
one-quarter of owners remain unlicensed (the true figure is probably closer
to half) and upwards of 1.5 million guns (including 300,000 handguns) cannot
be accounted for.
Every month, new revelations expose the registry as an even greater farce
and bigger waste. Yet the Liberals refuse to dismantle it or even alter it
significantly because to do so would offend their voter base in Toronto and
Montreal. Is it any wonder that, with each passing month, the registry
generates more and more outrage among rural Westerners?
_____________________
Lorne Gunter
Columnist and Edit Bd Member,
National Post
Columnist, Edmonton Journal
Tele: (780) 916-0719
E-mail:
lgunter@shaw.ca
Fax: (780) 481-4735
Address: 132 Quesnell Cres NW,