Regulations prohibiting the sale, purchase, or transfer of handguns within Canada took effect on Friday, as Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the measure builds on earlier efforts banning handgun imports.
The handgun freeze was announced in May alongside proposed legislation that would implement the nation’s strongest gun control measures in 40 years as part of Trudeau’s plan to tackle gun violence, his office said.
But the freeze was criticized by the government of the western province of Alberta, which has previously said it will resist other gun control measures proposed by Ottawa.
“We have frozen the market for handguns in this country,” Trudeau said at a news conference in Surrey, British Columbia, attended by family members of gun violence victims and other advocates.
“As we see gun violence continue to rise… we have an obligation to take action,” Trudeau added. “Today our national handgun freeze is coming into force.” Friday’s action stops people from buying, selling, or transferring handguns within Canada, and prevents them from bringing newly acquired handguns into the country, according to the prime minister’s office.
Canadian Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino called it the most significant action on gun violence in Canada in a generation. Trudeau’s ruling Liberal government introduced bill C-21 to fight gun violence, and his office said Friday’s move will help “keep Canadians safe” while the legislation is debated. In August, it banned imports until the law passes.
“We’ve got to get that law passed as quickly as possible,” Mendicino said, speaking alongside Trudeau. Under the executive action, any handgun applications submitted before Friday will still be processed, Trudeau’s office said. But Tyler Shandro, Alberta’s Minister of Justice, said the move unfairly penalized law-abiding firearms owners. (SOURCE)