Almost 21 years ago, Australia passed tight gun control laws in the wake of the nation’s biggest massacre at Port Arthur, Tasmania. The 1996 National Firearms Agreement (NFA) and Buyback Program was instituted federally, regulating the type of gun ownership in the strictest of terms.
Initially, the kickback against the laws by pro-gun organisations, advocating the rights of hunters, farmers and gun collectors was controversial, however with strong social and media support, legislation was passed by a federal government, led by then newly-elected Prime Minister John Howard, that once had little to do with firearms ownership laws.
The strict controls effectively banned a massive range of considered deadly weapons. It followed less than 2 weeks after the Port Arthur Massacre that left 35 dead and 18 seriously wounded.
On April 28, 1996, Martin Bryant, then 28, entered the Broad Arrow café in Tasmania’s Port Arthur, a historic penal colony tourist town, and used a semi-automatic rifle to gun down 12 of his victims. He proceeded to move through the gift shop, parking lot and gas station, armed with high-calibre firearms, taking down more of his victims.
As a result, 12 days later, a vote was passed by federal and state leaders, restricting and prohibiting the sale and ownership of just about every semi-automatic and rapid-fire gun and rifle available on the market. A buyback program was also initiated, which saw over 700,000 voluntary hand-ins of weapons, costing the government around $230 million.
What Are the Results on Firearms-Related Homicide Since?
Two decades leading up to the Port Arthur Massacre, 112 lives were claimed in mass shootings. The two decades following the Buyback scheme and the NFA has seem firearms-related deaths plummet. Up until 2012, only “30 homicides by firearm” occurred per year nationwide. These statistics were comparable to the United States in the same year recording 9,146, and Mexico recording 11,309 annually.
The decline in firearms-related homicide and suicide rates fell by 65 percent 10 years after the law was introduced. There was no recorded “parallel increase in non-firearm homicides and suicides.”
For the states that introduced the buyback scheme quicker – such as Tasmania – the correlation of firearm-related suicides dropped in relation.
Former Liberal Prime Minister John Howard wrote in The New York Times, 17 years after the Port Arthur Massacre, his view of gun control. “The fundamental problem,” he wrote, “was the ready availability of high-powered weapons, which enabled people to convert their murderous impulses into mass killing. Certainly, shortcomings in treating mental illness and the harmful influence of violent video games and movies may have played a role. But nothing trumps easy access to a gun. It is easier to kill 10 people with a gun than with a knife.”
Up until recent May 2016 statistics, no fatal mass shooting have occurred in Australia since the implementation of the 1996 legislation.
In one study, published in July 2016 in the Journal of the American Medical Association, titled Association Between Gun Law Reforms and Intentional Firearm Deaths in Australia, 1979-2013, the authors wrote:
“From 1979-1996 (before gun law reforms), 13 fatal mass shootings occurred in Australia, whereas from 1997 through May 2016 (after gun law reforms), no fatal mass shootings occurred.”
A commentary in JAMA wrote: “Yet the experience in Australia over the past 2 decades since enactment of the NFA National Firearms Agreement provides a useful example of how a nation can come together to forge life-saving policies despite political and cultural divides.”
The United States, after the Orlando shooting that left 49 people dead, experienced a renewal in the gun debate. The divisive issue in mid-2016 saw the Senate supress four measures to limit civilian access to automatic weapons.
Gun-related deaths were reported as 11.2 per 100,000 people in 2015, comparable to Australia’s 1.2 per 100,000 in the same year.
While Australian farmers are still permitted their rifles; hunters still hunt; and competition shooters still have their handguns, the ban on semi-automatic and automatic firearms has marked a significant drop in firearms-related deaths that is difficult to dispute, according to Snopes.
“If U.S. firearm homicide rates were only 10 times as high as firearm homicide rates in Australia, rather than 23 times as high, there would be substantially fewer homicides,” the JAMA commentary reported.
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I never celebrating loss of freedom.
John Howard is a war criminal and should be on trial with G.W. Bush & Tony Blair for crimes on humanity, creating a religious crusade and a false “war on terror” through lies of WMD in Iraq and 9.11.
John Howard is morally responsible for the death of all Australian military personal died in combat or through suicide post war, after service in Iraq or elsewhere. The war on terror was not very friendly on the Australian budget either helping the biggest Australian debt accumulation started under John Howard’s term as PM.
Until Australia officially awakes and gets rid of all the colonial and other chains tied around its neck there will be no need for celebrations at all.