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禁还是不禁,it is a question!--关于禁枪,你有话说吗

The stars 加拿大社区平台 2021-01-27


图文来源the star

加拿大留学生问吧


版权属于原作者,不代表本平台观点


一份新的民调显示,绝大多数加拿大人赞同在城市里禁枪。


根据这次由Ekos 研究中心为加通社主持的民调,69%的被调者同意“我认为市区应严禁枪支”这一表述。


魁省有高达76%的人赞同,是比例最高的。赞成人数比例最低的是阿尔伯塔省,为48%.


联邦自由党目前正在谋求立法严控枪支,履行竞选承诺。

Ekos 总裁 Frank Graves特别指出,自由党的计划并不是完全禁枪,事实上,没有任何一个政党提议完全禁枪。

鉴于民众广泛支持严控枪支,看来是有可能不仅限于对现有法律小修小补而已,可以提出更进一步的控枪要求。

加拿大绝大多数犯罪不涉及枪支,但是与枪支有关的暴力事件数量有上升。

火爆新闻:多伦多女子枪队成立!请把此帖转给身边的女性,没准她就是一个隐形的wonder woman

延伸阅读世界上允许私人拥有枪支的国家,远比想象的多

加拿大统计局上月发布的数据显示,自2012年以后,2016年枪击首度成为最普遍使用的凶杀手段,涉及枪支的凶杀案数量连续第三年上升。


统计局的数字还显示,2014年共有587人使用枪支结束生命,比2013年的544人增多。


政府为何不进一步取缔枪支呢?标准的回答是因为加拿大城市和农村在枪支管控问题上存在较大政治分歧。身处乡野、警力有所不及地区的人需要使用枪支猎取食物和自卫。


Ekos民调显示,在城市禁枪问题上,无论是哪个党派的支持者,同意的人都占大多数,自称自由党的人中有86%支持禁枪,56%的保守党和75%的新民主党也都支持城市禁枪。

公共安全部长Ralph Goodale表示,相关立法工作正在进行。



“这是重要话题,处理这个问题在某些地方可能存在争议,过去为此所做的努力最终失败了。我想确保此次推出的一系列立法能够成功,一定要完成这个目标。”

延伸阅读仅249元,拥有一把高规格警用气手枪,参加一场高规格的枪手培训吧。加拿大华人枪队12月16日!

An Ekos poll conducted for The Canadian Press shows that 69 per cent of those surveyed nationwide agree there should be a strict ban on guns in urban areas.



While new research shows the majority of Canadians would support a gun ban in urban areas, no major political party has ever suggested the idea.  (CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

OTTAWA—The vast majority of Canadians favours a total ban on guns in urban areas, a new poll suggests.

According to the poll, conducted by Ekos Research Associates for The Canadian Press, 69 per cent of those surveyed agreed with the statement “I think that there should be a strict ban on guns in urban areas.”

Support was highest in Quebec at 76 per cent and lowest in Alberta at 48 per cent.

The federal Liberals are currently at work on legislation to follow through on campaign commitments to tighten up restrictions on guns, though an earlier suggestion a new bill could be introduced before the end of the year now seems unlikely.

The Liberal plans don’t involve any kind of total ban and, indeed, no political party has ever suggested the idea, noted Ekos president Frank Graves.

But widespread support for the concept suggests there’s room to simply stop tinkering with existing gun laws and put in place something more ambitious, he said.

“I’m not saying the operationalization wouldn’t be complex, but this isn’t a moon shot and it’s been done in other jurisdictions,” Graves said.

“I think Canadians would settle for something close — it wouldn’t have to be a strict ban, but anything to move the needle here.”


  • Why Billy Bush’s Trump op-ed should terrify us all

Guns are not involved in the vast majority of crimes in Canada, but there have been increases in gun-related violence.

Statistics released last month showed that 2016 was the first time since 2012 that shootings were the most common method of homicide in Canada. Statistics Canada also reported that 2016 was the third year in a row that the number of firearm-related homicides rose.

The agency also reported last month that 587 people took their own lives with the use of a firearm in 2014, up from 544 the year before.

A standard response to why government doesn’t go further to crack down on guns is politics and the perception that urban Canadians view the issue far differently than rural dwellers, who use guns to hunt for food or protect themselves in remote regions beyond the everyday reach of law enforcement.


The political divide has played itself out repeatedly during national debates on gun control. In 2011, two NDP MPs from Thunder Bay, Ont., were disciplined when they broke ranks and voted in favour of the Conservative government’s legislation to repeal the gun registry.

During the Conservative leadership race earlier this year, a clear position on firearms-related policy was a must-have for candidates, many of whom actively courted firearms enthusiasts.

But the Ekos survey suggests there’s support across the political spectrum for restrictions that are limited to urban areas — 86 per cent of respondents who identified themselves as Liberals, 56 per cent of Conservatives and 75 per cent of New Democrats backed an urban ban.

The automated landline and cellphone survey of 2,287 Canadians was carried out Nov. 10-30 and is considered accurate within 2.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

In 2015, the federal Liberals made several campaign commitments related to firearms. They’ve fulfilled some, including a revamp of a national advisory board and increased funding to the provinces to address gun violence.

That money was announced last month at an event in Surrey, B.C., where a federal byelection is underway in a community that has a long-standing issue with guns and gangs.

The Liberals also pledged to require enhanced background checks for anyone seeking to buy a gun, and prospective buyers must also show a licence. Those who sell guns would, among other things, be required to keep an inventory of stock and sales.

Their platform also promised to get more weapons off the streets by strengthening controls on handguns and assault weapons.

A group that includes family members of women killed at a shooting at the Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal in 1989, as well as survivors of a shooting at Montreal’s Dawson College in 2006 and one at a mosque in Quebec City last year gathered on Parliament Hill last week to press the Liberals to commit to a firm timeline for the changes.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said work is underway on related legislation.

“It is an important topic and efforts in the past in dealing with a topic that has the potential to, in some places, be controversial has ended up foundering,” he said.

“When I put forward the legislative package, I want to make sure that it’s a package that will succeed. That’s my objective and we’ll get it done.”

People whose lives have been changed directly by gun violence say they’ve been waiting too long.

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