Monday 19 January 2026
Home      All news      Contact us      RSS      Chinese
asiaone - 1 month ago

A beachside shooting throws Australia s three-decade gun control regime into question

SYDNEY — After Australia s worst mass shooting in 1996, it took the government 12 days to ban semi-automatic weapons, organise a gun buyback scheme and introduce a licensing system to weed out people considered unfit to carry a weapon.Sunday s shooting at a Jewish celebration in Sydney s Bondi Beach, which left 15 people dead as well as one of the two gunmen, raised questions about whether Australia s gun laws, already among the toughest in the world, remain fit for purpose.Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he would ask Cabinet to consider limits on the number of weapons permitted by a gun licence, and how long a licence should last. People s circumstances can change, he told reporters on Monday (Dec 15) as police investigated what they called the terrorist attack on Sydney s waterfront. People can be radicalised over a period of time. Licences should not be in perpetuity. Australia s gun ownership system has been widely credited with one of the lowest per capita gun homicide rates.


Latest News
Hashtags:   

beachside

 | 

shooting

 | 

throws

 | 

Australia

 | 

three

 | 

decade

 | 

control

 | 

regime

 | 

question

 | 

Sources