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NRA-ILA Grassroots Alert Vol. 11, No. 20
www.nraila.org
In March of 1996, a deranged man walked into a school in Dunblane,
Scotland and killed sixteen children and one teacher. In the aftermath of
this heinous tragedy, British politicians sought to reduce violent crime
by enacting an injudicious ban on all handguns. Handgun owners were given
a February 1998 deadline to turn in their firearms--and they did. The UK
was supposed to become a much safer place--but it didn't. Not by a long
shot.
As reported in a May 14 article in the Edmonton Journal, England's
recently released gun-crime statistics for the first five years following
the gun-ban indicate a very different outcome than that which was
forecast. According to the article, "the incidence of gun crime in England
and Wales nearly doubled from 13,874 in 1998 to 24,070 in 2003. And the
incidence of firearms murder, while thankfully still very small, has risen
65 per cent," (emphasis added).
The article details statistics from another report issued last year by
Britain's Home Office, which reveal that there has also been a dramatic
increase in robberies in recent years. They report that robberies, "rose
by 28 per cent in 2002 alone and, since 1998, there has been an increase
in the annual average of muggings of more than 100,000. England alone has
nearly 400,000 robberies each year, a rate nearly one-quarter higher per
capita than that of the United States,"
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