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EU seeks tougher gun laws

October 21, 2013

Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstroem has said the EU can "no longer watch on without acting" as 1,000 Europeans are killed in gun violence each year. She is proposing unified, stricter rules for the whole bloc.

https://p.dw.com/p/1A2uJ
HOUSTON, TX - MAY 05: Handguns are displayed in the Remington booth during the 2013 NRA Annual Meeting and Exhibits at the George R. Brown Convention Center on May 5, 2013 in Houston, Texas. More than 70,000 people attended the NRA's 3-day annual meeting that featured nearly 550 exhibitors, a gun trade show and a political rally. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Image: Getty Images

Cecilia Malmstroem wrote a guest column for the Monday edition of the Frankfurter Rundschau daily, saying the EU must act to limit the number of deaths from gun violence.

The EU's home affairs commissioner wrote that one problem with the open-border bloc was "the danger that criminals try to get hold of their guns in the countries with the most lax laws" on gun ownership.

Malmstroem therefore proposed that the European Commission should examine "whether it's possible for all of Europe to legally decide which weapons should be permitted for civilian usage, and who should be granted permission to acquire a firearm."

epa03162228 European home affairs Commissioner, Swedish Cecilia Malmstroem, gives a press briefing on the Establishment of a European Cybercrime Centre, at the EU commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, 28 March 2012. The European Commission adopted a Communication on a European Cybercrime Centre, to be established within the EU law enforcement agency, Europol. The Centre is to become the focal point in the fight against cybercrime in the Union. EPA/BRUNO ARNOLD +++(c) dpa - Bildfunk+++
Malmstroem's comments preceded a Monday meeting on the matter in LuxembourgImage: picture-alliance/dpa

The European Commission has pledged a report on firearms and internal security, with the German daily Die Welt reporting on Monday that it had obtained a copy. Malmstroem was due to present the findings to EU interior ministers in Luxembourg on Monday.

The report estimates there to be around 80 million legally-purchased and licensed firearms in the European Union - and a further 500,000 that are lost, stolen, or otherwise unaccounted for. Many of these are thought to be circulating on the black market.

The annual Small Arms Survey report in 2007 sought to estimate gun ownership per capita around the world. According to these results, Germany had 30.3 registered firearms for every 100 inhabitants – putting it above average in European Union terms, but behind countries like Finland (45.3), Cyprus (36.4) and Sweden (31.6). The US topped the global list by a considerable margin, averaging just under one gun per person, according to the research institute based in Switzerland.

Rule changes reportedly under European Commission consideration include revising which guns are eligible for home ownership, tighter regulations for the sale and ownership of antique weapons and air rifles or air pistols, and a possible ban on selling weapons or ammunition on the Internet.

msh/jm (AFP, dpa)