‘We Are Seeing Way Too Many Guns from the United States Coming across the Border’

Published in Guangming Daily
(China) on 5 September 2024
by (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Jo Sharp. Edited by Michelle Bisson.
“It used to be that whenever we heard about a shooting in the U.S., we thought, ‘Maybe they’ll see how safe it is here and become more like us.’ But unfortunately, we are now becoming more like them.”*

These words from Wendy Cukier, co-founder of the Coalition for Gun Control and a professor at the University of Toronto, express her deep disappointment with Toronto, the country’s largest city, which was once considered one of the safest cities in the world.

The data show that as of the end of August, there have been 306 shootings in Toronto this year, a sharp increase of 50% over the same period last year. Guns that have been smuggled from the United States are the main reason.

'A Gun That Costs $500 in the US Can Sell for $5,000 in Canada'

According to The Wall Street Journal, the surge in gun violence in Toronto is mainly driven by turf wars in the tow truck industry. Some local tow truck businesses are controlled by gangs, and rival factions often clash when one encroaches on the other’s territory. Local police say that in the past, these disputes were mostly settled with fists, but now, guns smuggled from the U.S. have turned these conflicts into a “blood sport,” making tow truck services a deadly business.

Data from Canadian border patrol agencies show that the number of smuggled guns seized at the U.S.-Canada border increased by 25% between 2019 and 2024. These guns mainly come from U.S. states with lax gun control, such as Ohio, Michigan, Texas and Florida. Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow has blamed the influx of smuggled American guns for the city’s rapid growth in violent crime: “No doubt about it, we are seeing way too many guns from the United States coming across the border.”

Some U.S. media outlets have previously reported that, unlike the United States, the Canadian Constitution does not provide for the right to bear arms, which means that it is easier for the government to pass gun control laws, and restrictions on gun sales are much stricter. However, gun regulations were relaxed during the Conservative government administration from 2006 to 2015, most notably with the 2012 repeal of a mandatory national gun registry, making it harder for law enforcement to effectively track the weapons used in crimes. In addition, U.S. gun lobby groups like the National Rifle Association have stimulated the firearms market and fueled anti-gun-control sentiment, deliberately influencing the gun culture of neighboring countries. It has led to a sharp rise in the number of firearms flowing from the U.S. into Canada.

Per capita, Canada is now the largest overseas buyer of U.S. small arms and has the second-highest rate of gun ownership among developed countries, after the United States. [Former] Toronto Police Chief Bill Fordy has stated that the explicit right to bear arms in the U.S. Constitution makes guns easy to obtain, creating a lucrative black market. Some people buy guns in the U.S. and then resell them in Canada for huge profits.

It is believed that a gun purchased for $500 in the U.S. can easily sell for $5,000 in Canada. Once these U.S. guns enter Canada, they are likely to be used in robberies, murders and other violent crimes. Fordy noted that last year, in Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, 90% of the guns used in known violent crimes were traced back to the United States, “through our tracing and analysis, we know the top states (these guns come from) are Ohio, Texas, Florida and Georgia.”

'Being Geographically Close to the US Is a Really Big Problem'

In fact, gun violence has not only long been an epidemic that the U.S. cannot cure but has become a contagion that harms other parts of the world, particularly neighboring countries. Compared to Canada, a developed northern neighbor, Mexico, the southern neighbor of the United States, suffers even more from the smuggling of U.S. guns, for which there's no remedy.

Mexico has very strict gun control laws, with only one gun store in the entire country. However, neighboring U.S. border states are full of gun stores. The Mexican government has long accused U.S. gun manufacturers and distributors of fueling rampant arms smuggling across the border, resulting in about 500,000 guns being illegally trafficked into Mexico each year, many of which end up in the hands of criminal gangs.

Since 2021, the Mexican government has been filing lawsuits against several U.S. gun makers and dealers in at least two states, seeking $10 billion in damages. However, the Mexican side has so far been unable to win its cases due to the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, passed by the U.S. in 2005, which shields U.S. gun manufacturers and dealers from civil liability.

Statistics show that most of the guns found and traced in violent crimes in Latin America come from the United States. The long-standing Haiti crisis is a clear example of how American guns plague Latin American countries. A research report, “Haiti’s Criminal Markets,” released by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime earlier this year, pointed out that "every metric of insecurity […] is trending upward” in Haiti and a major reason is that “firearms trafficking between the US and Haiti is surging.”*

According to estimates by Haiti’s National Commission on Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration, the country may have as many as 500,000 small arms in circulation, of which only 38,000 are legally registered. Analysts say that with the increase in trafficking in recent years this number may now be even higher. Brazilian security expert Robert Muggah has pointed out that the easy flow of U.S. guns is one of the main factors worsening Haiti’s social instability. He has warned that the massive influx of illegal weapons has greatly strengthened the power of Haitian criminal gangs, allowing them to easily overwhelm the country’s poorly armed law enforcement agencies and leading to an escalation in violent crime.

All of this explains why the number of Haitian immigrants attempting to enter the U.S. illegally has been rising in recent years. Haitian economist Camille Chalmers has said that Haiti’s ongoing turmoil and its people’s insecurity are not only the product of U.S. and Haitian domestic powers conspiring to create chaos but are also linked to the covert support provided by the smuggling of U.S. guns. He says it is “making the country’s development increasingly difficult” and that “being geographically close to the U.S. is a really big problem.”*


*Editor's Note: These quotes, while accurately translated, could not be independently verified.


“以前只要一听说美国发生枪击案,我们就会想‘他们也许会看到我们这里有多安全,然后变得像我们’。但很不幸,我们现在已经变得越来越像他们了。”
  加拿大枪支控制联盟联合创始人、多伦多大学教授温迪·库基尔的这番话,无奈地道出了她对自己所在的该国最大城市、曾经也被认为是世界上最安全城市之一的多伦多的深深失望。

数据显示,截至8月底,多伦多市今年共发生了306起枪击事件,与去年同期相比大幅增加了50%。
  而其背后的主要祸根,就是来自美国的走私枪支。


在美国500美元的枪到加拿大可卖5000美元
  据美国《华尔街日报》报道,多伦多市激增的枪支暴力主要由“拖车地盘之争”引起。
  由于当地的部分拖车行业由黑帮控制,敌对帮派之间经常因为对方“越界”而发生纠纷。
  当地警方说,以前帮派间大多是用拳头解决争端,但现在来自美国的走私枪支使他们之间的争夺变成了“血腥战斗”。这也让拖车服务变成了一桩“致命的生意”。

加拿大边境巡逻机构提供的数据显示,2019至2024财年,他们在加美边境缴获的走私枪支增加了25%。
  这些枪支主要来自美国的俄亥俄州、密歇根州、得克萨斯州和佛罗里达州等枪支管控宽松的地区。
  多伦多市长奥利维亚·周指责美国走私枪支导致该市暴力犯罪事件激增:“毫无疑问,我们看到太多美国枪支越过边境”。


有美媒此前报道指出,与美国不同,加拿大宪法没有规定携带武器的权利,这意味着政府更容易通过控枪法律,而且对枪支销售的限制也要严格得多。
  然而,2006年至2015年执政的加拿大保守党政府放宽了控枪规定,主要是在2012年废除了一项强制性的全国枪支登记制度,导致执法部门难以有效追踪犯罪枪支。
  再加上美国的全国步枪协会等枪支利益集团通过煽动反控枪情绪大肆刺激枪支市场、蓄意影响邻国枪支文化,从美国流入加拿大的枪支数量随之激增。


按人均计算,加拿大目前已经成为美国轻武器的最大海外买家,在发达国家中人均拥枪数量仅次于美国。
  多伦多警察局长比尔·福迪表示,美国宪法明文规定了携带武器的权利,这使得枪支很容易获得,同时也创造了一种利润丰厚的非法交易。一些人会将他们在美国购买的枪支带到加拿大转手倒卖牟取暴利。
  据了解,在美国以500美元购买的枪支在加拿大很容易卖到5000美元。而一旦这些美国枪支流入加拿大,就很可能被用于抢劫、杀人等暴力犯罪。
  福迪称,去年,在加拿大人口最多的省份安大略省,90%的已知暴力犯罪中所用枪支都可以溯源到美国。
  “通过我们的追踪和分析,我们知道(这些枪支)主要来自美国俄亥俄州、得克萨斯州、佛罗里达州和佐治亚州。”

“距离美国太近是海地发展的主要障碍”
  事实上,枪支暴力不仅早已成为美国自己无法治愈的“流行病”,更是成了祸害世界其他地区、特别是广大邻近国家的“传染病”。
  相对于加拿大这个发达的北部邻国,美国的南部邻国墨西哥面对美国的走私枪支更是苦不堪言,求告无门。
  墨西哥有着十分严格的控枪法律,全国只有一家枪店。而相邻的美国边境各州却是枪店林立。墨政府一直指责美国枪支产销商助长了猖獗的武器越境走私,导致每年约有50万支枪非法流入墨西哥,其中许多落入犯罪团伙手中。
  早自2021年起,墨西哥政府就向美国至少两个州的法院起诉多家美国枪支产销商,并向它们索赔100亿美元。但由于美国2005年通过的《武器合法商业保护法案》保护美国枪支产销商免受民事追责,墨方至今无法打赢官司。


 有统计表明,在整个拉美地区发现和追踪到的暴力犯罪案件涉案枪支中,大部分都来自美国。
  美国枪支如何荼毒拉美国家,长期持续的海地危机就是明证。
  联合国毒品和犯罪问题办公室今年早些时候发布的《海地犯罪市场》研究报告指出,海地“所有不安全的迹象都在增加”,而一大重要原因是“美国和海地之间的枪支走私失控”。

据海地全国解除武装委员会此前估计,该国可能流散着多达50万件小型武器,其中合法登记的只有3.8万件。分析人士称,随着近几年来武器走私活动更加频繁,这一数字现在可能会更高。
  巴西安全问题专家罗伯特·穆加指出,美国枪支轻易外流是加剧海地社会治安恶化的主要因素之一。
  他警告,大量流入的非法武器极大增强了海地犯罪团伙的实力,不仅能让他们轻易击败火力远逊于他们的国家执法力量,更导致暴力犯罪愈演愈烈。

这一切也足以解释,为什么试图进入美国的海地非法移民近年来不断增加。
  海地经济学家卡米尔·查默斯曾说过,海地持续动荡、民不聊生不仅是美国与海地国内势力合谋制造混乱导致的恶果,更与美国走私枪支的暗中助力难脱干系。而“距离美国太近,正是海地实现发展的主要障碍”。
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