New Zealand’s PM Ardern acts to tighten gun laws further, six months after attack

New Zealand’s PM Ardern acts to tighten gun laws further, six months after attack

WELLINGTON: New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern introduced a new bill to parliament on ..

WELLINGTON: New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern introduced a new bill to parliament on Friday (Sep 13) that aims to further tighten gun laws, as the country marks six months since the mass shooting in Christchurch that killed 51 Muslim worshippers.

This is New Zealand's second set of gun reforms after weak firearm laws were identified as a key reason why a suspected white supremacist was able to own semi-automatic weapons that he used to kill people gathered at two mosques for Friday prayers on Mar 15.

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Australian Brenton Tarrant has been charged for the attack and has pleaded not guilty.

READ: Trial of accused Christchurch gunman delayed to avoid Ramadan

The government had near-unanimous support in parliament when it earlier passed a law banning military style semi-automatics (MSSAs) in a first round of reforms within weeks of the attack, New Zealand's worst peace-time mass shooting.

"Owning a firearm is a privilege not a right," Ardern said in a statement announcing the new bill on Friday.

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"That attack exposed weaknesses in legislation which we have the power to fix. We would not be a responsible government if we didn't address them," she said.

The new bill, details of which have already been made public and that will have its first reading on Sep 24, will include the creation of a registry to monitor and track every firearm legally held in New Zealand.

It also tightens other rules for gun dealers and for individuals to get and keep a firearm licence. Licence renewal for individuals was also reduced to five years from ten years.

New Zealand's efforts on gun control have gained global praise, especially in the United States, where lawmakers in favour of gun control and activists have struggled to address gun violence despite back-to-back mass shootings in Texas and Ohio last month.

At home, Ardern has also faced resistance from the federal opposition National party and gun lobby groups, who have indicated they will not support tighter gun laws as they target law-abiding firearm owners, a claim she has rejected.

The government was also slammed recently by critics of its firearm buy-back scheme that has given gun owners until Dec 20 to hand in weapons that have been banned.

More than 19,100 firearms and about 70,800 gun accessories have been handed in so far, which some critics say ar

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