Women's Day 2012 one more step to ending gun control protections for women
TORONTO, March 8, 2012 /CNW/ - International Women's Day is meant to be a day of celebration of women's rights. In Canada, the day will mean another step in the federal government's march to destroy both the long-gun registry and its records of long-gun ownership, says the Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Houses (OAITH). The Association is a province-wide network primarily of first and second stage women's emergency shelters for women escaping violence.
Today, as the Senate votes to send Bill C-19 to committee for examination, the Association is joining the effort to seek changes to the legislation in the Senate committee process.
The registry, set up after the Montreal Massacre and now marked by the December 6th National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence against Women in Canada, has been the target of the powerful gun lobby since before its inception. With the Conservative Party in a majority position, the gun lobby finally hit their bull's-eye.
Women's anti-violence and gun control advocates have the evidence supporting the value of the registry in reducing long-gun violence against women by abusive men. Police agencies use the registry thousands of times daily to prepare when they respond to 'domestics'. Yet concerted and ongoing attempts to reason with the Harper government have not moved the Conservatives off their politically inspired agenda to destroy both the registry and its records.
"It seems the 'rights' of gun owners to be free of the minor inconvenience of registering their lethal weaponry trumps the rights of women and children to be safe from violence against women," said Leighann Burns, Executive Director of Harmony House in Ottawa and representative of the OAITH's Social Justice and Action Committee.
The Conservative Party the gun lobby and especially controlling and abusive gun owners, may celebrate again today, as the CP drafters of the bill did when it passed in the House of Commons, with laughter and toasts to victory. Women's groups, however, especially those who work with women on the frontlines of women's shelters in rural and Northern communities, won't be joining the grim party.
Instead, they will be continuing their efforts to protect women in the Senate process and with the Ontario government.
The Senate could reduce the dangerous impact of Bill C-19, including rejecting sections that would further erode the tracking and checking of gun licences, as recommended by the 1998 inquest into the long-gun murder of Arlene May by her ex-boyfriend in Ontario. Arlene May was shot to death by Randy Iles on International Women's Day, 1996.
In that case, the jury made a number of recommendations about gun tracking and licence checks along with police and system control of guns and Firearms Acquisition Certificates that, at the time, the jury felt would help prevent similar deaths in the future.
(Recommendations in the inquest into the deaths of Arlene May and Randall Iles can be accessed online at: http://www.oaith.ca/assets/files/Publications/May-Iles-inquest-recommendations.pdf.)
The Arlene May inquest is just one of many points of process, research, and practice that have both identified the dangers of long-guns to women in abusive relationships and the value to Canadian women—and police—of tracking and controlling the purchase and ownership of long-guns by violent men.
"Governments like to talk of 'evidence-based' policy and action," said Burns. "We have the evidence to support the registry and other gun control mechanisms. We need to see action in the Senate to respond to the evidence we have to offer both statistically, and in the lived experiences of women like Arlene May and many others living under the threat of gun violence by partners."
We are also calling on Premier McGuinty to take a strong stand for women by demanding that the federal government restore mandatory licence checks before gun sales and demanding the registry data for Ontario. The Quebec government has vowed to fight the federal government in court to get the data and protect their citizens. The Ontario government cannot stand idly by and watch valuable tools that can protect Ontario women, like Arlene May, be thoughtlessly destroyed.
It is a shame on our government that on International Women's Day Canadian women can no longer celebrate federal action to keep them safe by 'keeping the guns in check and to keeping the checks on guns'.
Media contact: Leighann Burns, Harmony House (Ottawa) (613) 233-5990
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