Germany mulls tighter gun laws after Munich shooting rampage

Germany mulls tighter gun laws after Munich shooting rampage

July 25, 2016
People mourn beside the Olympia shopping center where a shooting took place leaving nine people dead two days ago in Munich, Germany, on Sunday. — AP
People mourn beside the Olympia shopping center where a shooting took place leaving nine people dead two days ago in Munich, Germany, on Sunday. — AP

BERLIN — Senior German officials on Sunday called for a review of Germany’s already strict gun laws after Friday’s deadly shooting in Munich that claimed the lives of nine people and the gunman, a deranged 18-year-old who was obsessed with mass killings.

“Gun control is an important issue. We must continue to do all we can to limit and strictly control access to deadly weapons,” German Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, leader of the center-left Social Democrats, told Funke Mediengruppe, which owns a series of German newspapers.

Gabriel said German authorities were investigating how the German-Iranian dual national had gained illegal access to the weapon — identified by police as a 9 mm Glock 17 pistol, the most widely used law enforcement weapon worldwide — despite signs that he had significant psychological issues.

“Clearly we will have to have a discussion in the near future about whether the current gun control laws are sufficient,” said German lawmaker Stephan Mayer, a spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s ruling conservatives in parliament.

“The biggest priority is to combat the illegal arms trade since that could also reduce crime and terrorism,” he said in a statement on Sunday.

The gunman, named by German media as Ali David Sonboly, opened fire near a busy shopping mall on Friday evening, killing nine and wounding 35 more, before turning the gun on himself as police approached.

The Munich shooting was the third act of violence against civilians in Western Europe — and the second in southern Germany — in eight days.
Officials said there were no signs of any links in this case to extremist groups.

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, also a member of Merkel’s Democrats, told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper in a separate interview that he planned to review German gun laws after the attack, and seek improvements where needed.

De Maiziere said German gun laws were already very strict, which he considered appropriate, and it was critical to understand how the shooter gained access to the pistol used.

“Then we have to evaluate very carefully if and where further legal changes are needed,” he said in an interview published on Sunday.

Mayer and De Maiziere also cited the current debate within the European Union about a package of reforms that would tighten gun controls within the bloc and make it easier to trace the origin of guns purchased legally.

The proposed changes, which must still be enacted by EU member states, would also set more stringent rules for deactivating previously fully-functioning guns and making them available for sale as so-called decorations.

Member states have different criteria for what does and does not constitute a deactivated weapon, a legal loophole exploited by criminals to import weapons that have only been superficially modified to appear non-functioning.

The Glock 17 used by the Munich gunman, which police said had had its serial number filed away, was such a “reactivated” weapon from the Slovakia, the Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported on Sunday, citing law enforcement sources.

Sonboly obtained the gun on the Internet, it said.

Gunman planned shooting for a year

MUNICH, Germany — The 18-year-old gunman who killed nine people in a shooting spree in Munich had been planning his crime for a year but chose his victims at random, officials said on Sunday.

“He had been preparing (the shooting) for a year,” Bavarian police chief Robert Heimberger told a news conference.

Chief prosecutor Thomas Steinkraus-Koch added that he did not specifically choose his victims.

“It is not the case that he deliberately selected” the people who he shot, he said.

Europe reacted in shock to the third attack on the continent in just over a week, after David Ali Sonboly went on a shooting spree at a shopping centre on Friday before turning the gun on himself.

Officials said on Saturday that Sonboly, a German-Iranian student, had a history of mental illness.

Investigators said they saw an “obvious link” between the killings and white supremacist Anders Breivik’s massacre of 77 people in Norway exactly five years earlier.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said Munich had suffered a “night of horror.”


July 25, 2016
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