Finnish minister says now is not the time to discuss gun laws after
child shooting
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[April 05, 2024]
By Anne Kauranen
HELSINKI (Reuters) - Finland already has quite "strict" firearms
legislation and now is not the right time to discuss tightening it,
Interior Minister Mari Rantanen said, following a school shooting this
week in which a 12-year-old boy shot three classmates.
A 12-year-old boy on Tuesday brought a relative's revolver to Viertola
school near Helsinki, shot dead a fellow sixth-grader and severely
injured two others.
Finnish interior ministry data show there are more than 1.5 million
licensed firearms and about 430,000 license holders in the nation of 5.6
million people, where hunting and target shooting are popular pastimes.
Finland's rate of civilian firearms per capita was the highest among
European Union countries, a study by Small Arms Survey found in 2018,
but Rantanen said the high number of guns does not make Finland "a gun
violent country".
"The police investigation is in its early stages, and even if they make
swift progress, this is by no means the right time to comment on whether
we should tighten our gun legislation," Rantanen told Reuters late on
Thursday, adding that the time for political conclusions would come
later.
The permit for the .22 caliber revolver used in Tuesday's attack
belonged to a relative of the suspect, police said, adding this kind of
gun is typically used in target shooting.
Gun owners are required by law to keep their weapons locked away.
RESERVISTS
The number of shooting practitioners has increased in Finland since
neighboring Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in
February 2022.
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People bring candles and flowers at the Viertola school in Vantaa,
Finland, on April 2, 2024. Lehtikuva/Roni Rekomaa via REUTERS /File
Photo
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Finland's defense is built on conscription which is compulsory for
all men, and reservists are encouraged to practice shooting to
maintain their skills.
In Finland's four-party, right-wing coalition Rantanen represents
the nationalist Finns Party, which has opposed stricter gun laws,
and she said her party's line had not changed.
There have been no major calls from opposition parties to tighten
gun legislation since Tuesday's shooting.
Finland will continue to ensure that reservists can practice
shooting and to protect shooting and hunting as pastimes as they
have a long history in the country, Rantanen said.
"I can say generally of our gun legislation that it is quite good
and strict to begin with, but then there is the question whether it
is abided by," she said.
The chairman of the Finnish parliament's defense committee, Jukka
Kopra of the National Coalition Party, echoed Rantanen's words,
saying discussing gun laws now would be "artificial".
"We need to explore ways to help young people and prevent them from
doing such things in the future," Kopra told Reuters.
(Reporting by Anne Kauranen; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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