What the fatal attack
on a British politician
says about guns in the
U.K.
Four days after the horrific mass shooting in Orlando sparked a fresh
debate about gun control in the United States, a fatal attack on a
politician in Britain is bringing attention to that country's gun
control policies.
Jo Cox, a member of the British Parliament for the center-left Labour
Party, was shot and stabbed while meeting with constituents near
the northern city of Leeds on Thursday. According to police,
the 41-year-old has died of her injuries.
Any physical attack on a British politician would be extremely
unusual, but that the attack on Cox involved a firearm may be
even more surprising within Britain. The United Kingdom has
strict gun laws that make getting a firearm quite difficult. Gun
crime is relatively low in the country.
"In terms of the types of gun that can be legally owned,
background checks and the penalties for illegal possession
and use, we are one of the strictest in Europe," Helen Poole,
a researcher with the University of Coventry who recently
studied firearms across the European Union, said in an e-mail.
The British government pursued legislative bans on assault
rifles and handguns and dramatically tightened background
checks for other types of firearms after a horrific mass shooting
at a school that killed 15 children and their teacher in 1996.
As The Washington Post reported in 2013 a total of 200,000
guns and 700 tons of ammunition were taken off British streets
in the 17 years since the attack. Military-style weapons and most
handguns were banned, including Olympics-style starting pistols.
According to the most recent statistics, there were 1,338,399
shotguns licensed in England and Wales last year, and more than
500,000 firearms of other types also licensed. There were about
582,494 licensed shotgun owners and 153,603 licensed for other
firearms, almost all of whom lived in rural areas and who used
their guns for sport or to protect their farmland.
That means that last year there were around 1,863,524 legally
held guns in England and Wales, two nations which have a total
population of over 58 million. To put it another way, this means
that around 3,200 shotguns and other firearms for every 100,000
people in Britain. Meanwhile, some estimates suggest that there
are believed to be about 357 million guns in the United States for
317 million people.
Legally owned guns are just one aspect of gun ownership, of
course. France has strict gun laws that are comparable to Britain's,
but authorities have estimated that there may be 30,000 illegally
obtained in the country. Around 4,000 were thought to be "war
weapons," including Uzis and the Kalashnikov AK-variant rifles.
These are the sorts of weapons that were used in a series of terror
attacks in Paris last year that killed scores of people.
Britain has not yet suffered a shooting attack on the similar scale
to the one in France. Perhaps part of this may come down to
geography, rather than policy. Because the island country is not
part of the Europe's Schengen Area, which has no border control,
importing a bulky AK-47 without arising official suspicion is a
difficult task. In France, driving halfway across the continent with
such a gun in the trunk of your car is a real possibility.
Without the widespread availability of such guns, anyone seeking
a firearm for criminal purposes in Britain will need to get creative.
In 2014, the Birmingham Mail reported that criminals in the city
had been forced to use "plundered war trophies and collectible
weapons, sometimes more than 100 years old." In fact, during the
2011 riots in the city, experts discovered that a late 19th-century St.
Etienne revolver had been fired. In other instances, flare guns and
replica weapons had been retrofitted in an attempt to make them
deadlier.
More sophisticated guns are often in drastically short supply.
Handguns have been sold for more than 10 times the price at which
they could be purchased in the United States. This sometimes leads
to elaborate arrangements between gun dealers and their customers.
The Economist has reported that two rival gangs in Birmingham
were later found to have used the same gun to shoot each other's
members and affiliates. Each had rented the gun from a third party
at separate times.
Matt Lewis, the director of Arquebus Solutions, a company that
helps governments track illegal firearms, says Britain is seen as
a "world leader" in understanding the circulation of illicit firearms.
"The UK has arguably the best approach the management of illicit
firearms in the E.U., if not across the globe," Lewis says.
Yet gun violence has not been eradicated in Britain. Last year, officials
recorded a rise in both homicides and gun-related crime in the country.
Numbers compiled by GunPolicy.org, a global project of the Sydney
School of Public Health, found that 146 people died because of gun
violence across Britain in 2012, the most recent year for which the
group has numbers. There have also been a small number of mass
shootings since stricter gun control legislation was put in place:
In 2010, a man shot 12 people and injured 11 more before killing
himself in a shooting rampage in Cumbria, England.
The shooter in that instance, Derrick Bird, used a double-barrel
shotgun and a .22-caliber rifle. He was a licensed firearms holder.
According to witnesses, the gun used to shoot Cox on Thursday
appeared to be either antique or modified.
"It looked like a gun from, I don't know, the First World War
or a makeshift, handmade gun," eyewitness Hichem Ben
Abdallah
told Sky News. "It's not sort of like the kind of gun you
see normally."
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