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Throw them out!
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Enough is enough!
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Anti-gun activists in the U.S. have been pushing for gun law reform.
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Australia, having made substantial changes to its gun laws, is often held as an example.
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The country has a very low rate of gun-related homicide when compared to the U.S.,
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where people are at least 20 times more likely to be murdered by firearms.
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Stricter gun controls can't stop every mass shooting, but they have made Australia a significantly safer place.
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Here's how.
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Australia used to have a serious problem with gun violence.
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Researchers define mass shootings as five or more deaths, not including the perpetrator.
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From 1979 to 1996 there were 13 mass shootings,
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resulting in over 100 deaths and more than 50 injuries.
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However, due to the gun lobby and politicians sympathetic to their firearm-owning voters
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little was done to stop gun deaths.
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If being a politician and living in that bloody house is the most important thing to them,
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then they're not worth it.
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In April 1996 that all changed.
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On the island of Tasmania, the worst massacre in Australia's history is finally over.
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At least 34 people were killed, and four others critically wounded.
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Armed with two rifles - an AR-15 and a .308 FN - Martin Bryant made his way through
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Port Arthur historic site killing 35 people and injuring a further 23.
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Both guns were semi-automatic, rapid-fire weapons and both were legal in the state of Tasmania.
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At the time, the Port Arthur massacre was the worst single-person mass shooting in global history.
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It utterly shocked Australians and reignited public outrage .
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Just 12 days later, the then Prime Minister John Howard pushed through a sweeping set
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of gun regulations, despite a lack of support from his rural constituency.
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I'm sorry about that, but there is no other way.
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There is no other way.
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Within a month, the government passed the National Firearms Agreement,
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transforming gun legislation in the country.
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Before the Port Arthur massacre gun laws varied from state to state.
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What the agreement did was standardize the laws nationally.
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Certain semi-automatics and self-loading rifles and shotguns were banned.
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New licensing requirements were adopted and a national firearms registry was established.
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The law says Australians need a “genuine reason” for having a firearm,
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such as sport shooting or for agricultural use.
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It doesn't include self-defense.
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People must go through background checks and wait 28 days before they can buy a gun.
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The government also spent $375 million , to buy back 640,000 civilian-owned guns
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and then destroyed them.
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After the gun law reform, the total number of homicides involving a firearm decreased by half.
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The total number of gun-related deaths fell rapidly as well,
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dropping more than half in 2016 compared with 1996.
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Australia didn't see a single mass shooting from 1996 to 2018, more than 22 years.
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However, anti-gun activists warned that following years of lobbying by pro-gun groups,
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Australia's strict gun laws have been eroded.
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And gun numbers are almost back to the same level as at the time of the Port Arthur massacre.
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In May 2018, a family of seven - including four children - were shot dead in an apparent
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murder-suicide in the state of Western Australia.
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It's brought back painful memories and uncertainty about the issue many thought had been resolved.
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Australia is not totally immune to mass shootings,
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but its response to the Port Arthur massacre demonstrated how strong political leadership
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and strict gun control policies can help curb violence and save lives.