Saturday, February 19, 2011

Yemen, awash in guns, wary about unrest

The Christian Science Monitor - CSMonitor.com
By Laura Kasinof, Correspondent
posted February 18, 2011 at 4:23 pm EST
Sanaa, Yemen —

Yemen has the highest guns-per-capita ratio in the world after the US. Tribesmen – some of whom have camped out in Sanaa's Tahrir Square – are widely said to have grenades, mortars, and even a rare tank.
As Yemeni protests escalate, tribesmen from rural parts of the country have come to Yemen's own Tahrir Square. But despite sharing the same name as the epicenter of Egypt's revolution, this central square in Sanaa has yet to attract throngs of antigovernment protesters – perhaps in no small part because the tribesmen occupying it are armed.

They're not the only ones carrying guns, however. In Yemen, which has one of the highest guns-per-capita ratios in the world and a weak central government, the Kalashnikov has become emblematic of masculinity, the size of one’s weapon cache synonymous with power.

“Shame on a man who leaves his house without his gun,” says Sinan Abo Zeid, a native of Yemen's northern border province Al Jawf, where men are known to pay for their cars’ gasoline in bullets whenever they don’t have enough cash. “In Al Jawf, the Kalashnikov is the government.”

As Yemen has become more volatile – a state headed toward failure, where it's unclear who would fill the power vacuum that could follow – the number of weapons slung across men's shoulders and stashed in tribal outposts is increasingly seen as problematic.

“There are dangerous risks that these weapons will get into the hands of the wrong people," says Sultan al-Atwany, a member of parliament (MP) from the opposition Nasserite party. "This is a big security risk in Yemen."

Grenades, mortars, and an odd tank

Due to a history of internal conflicts and international meddling, Yemen has 60 guns per 100 people – second only to the United States, according to a report conducted in 2007 by the Small Arms Survey, a Geneva-based independent research project.
Traditionally, tribal law regulated weapons use in this country. However, as a result of the gradual erosion of tribal norms due to urbanization, Yemen’s weak central government, and competition over resource depletion, gun-related violence is increasing. Revenge killings, kidnappings, and politically inspired fighting – including the terrorist operations of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula – plague Yemeni society.

Moreover, Yemen’s population is armed with weapons more powerful than guns. Tribes are widely said to have supplies of rocket-propelled grenades, mortars, and in some rare cases, tanks.

'Using my gun to take my rights'

Revelations from WikiLeaks’ released diplomatic cables highlight US concern about widespread weapons proliferation in a country where a regional branch of Al Qaeda has set up shop.

Starting in 2004, according to a cable, the US worked with the Yemeni government to buy back surface-to-air missiles, or MANPADS, in an attempt to remove them from the Yemeni arms market so that terrorists would not obtain the missiles. Other cables reveal US concern over weapons being smuggled out of Yemen to other terrorist organizations around the globe.

Rashad al-Alimi, the deputy prime minister for security and defense affairs, claimed that arms proliferation is one of four security challenges facing Yemen, says a report published by the Small Arms Survey in May 2010. Others include terrorist threats, border protection, and “weak loyalty to the state.”

Lack of federal rule of law in Yemen’s countryside has created a ethos of “using my gun to take my rights,” says Ayesh Awas, a researcher at the Sheba Center for Strategic Studies in Sanaa who has examined small-arms proliferation in Yemen.

“Weapons are not the main reason for internal conflicts, but they certainly make our conflicts more intense,” Mr. Awas says. “The presence of weapons encourages crimes.”

New laws, weapons seizures

The Yemeni government has made efforts to increase gun control in recent years.
In 1992, the Yemeni government passed a new regulation that prohibited carrying firearms in major cities, although it wasn’t until 2007 until authorities readily enforced the law. The central government had to realize, says Mr. Atwany, the opposition MP, that if absolutely no checks were put on weapon usage, it could end up backfiring against them – quite literally.

“The government used to say, 'Oh, this is the culture of Yemen,' " as an excuse to not have to deal with international concern regarding Yemen’s highly armed population, he says. “But when they saw that these weapons could be used against the state because of the strong resentment growing against [the central government], they started to enforce the law.”

The official Saba News Agency reported in April that the Interior Ministry has seized around 600,000 weapons since August 2008.

But parliament members who support an increase in state-sponsored gun control say it's unclear to what extent President Ali Abdullah Saleh's regime, which also has an interest in preserving allegiances with tribal sheikhs, is willing to press for stricter measures.

A new law, which would require that every piece of weaponry be licensed, is trying to make its way through parliament, but is being held up because many supporters of Yemen’s ruling party are powerful sheikhs who don’t want the state tampering with their stashes of weapons that number into the hundreds.

“If the state had the political will it would be able to enforce [gun-control laws] all over the country,” says Ali al-Mamari of Yemen’s ruling General People’s Congress party. The problem, he says, is that “those who are considered the best people in this country are not the better educated, but the people who are trained to shoot.”

Needed: Anti-gun campaign based on honor, courage

During Yemen’s civil wars in 1962 and 1994, leaders from the opposing sides in war would hand out weapons to tribes who provided them with support, Awas explains. This included Saudi Arabia, which started providing Yemeni tribes with weapons after 1962, in order to weaken the strength of northern Yemen’s recently established, Egyptian-supported republican government.

In Yemen’s south, the Soviets who supported South Yemen’s socialist regime heavily armed the population throughout the 1970s and 80s.

Now with weapons possession ingrained in the national psyche, analysts don’t see an easy solution to disarming the country.

“Programs could be initiated that attempt to change tribal values about owning and using weapons," says a 2003 Small Arms Survey report. "The difficulty, however, will be fashioning a campaign that can play on tribal strengths – such as honor, courage, and self-control – without advancing an argument that sounds ‘Western,’ which is a derogatory term throughout the region as it signifies a lack of respect for Islam and Arab tradition.”
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2011/0218/Yemen-awash-in-guns-wary-about-unrest

Friday, February 18, 2011

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Gun lobby stands firm in opposing Obama's ATF nominee

Chicago gang fighter called wrong choice to head agency

February 16, 2011|By Katherine Skiba, Tribune reporter

WASHINGTON — Andrew Traver, nominated to lead the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, faces a powerful foe on the road to Senate approval: the National Rifle Association.

Traver, 47, who has been praised for his work against Chicago area's street gangs, has led the ATF in Illinois since 2004. Both Illinois senators have applauded President Barack Obama's choice; so have law enforcement officials.

Obama nominated Traver in November, triggering strong opposition from the NRA, which called him hostile to the Second Amendment and urged Obama to withdraw the nomination.

Traver "has been deeply aligned with gun control advocates and anti-gun activities," Chris Cox, who leads the NRA's lobbying arm, said at that time.

Obama renominated Traver when the new Congress met in January and the NRA's rejection of Traver still stands.

The job of ATF director has required Senate confirmation only since 2006, but that's never happened, leaving the agency in the hands of acting directors. Even President George W. Bush couldn't get his nominee, a Republican U.S. attorney from Boston, through the Senate.

Writing to Obama this month, Illinois' two senators, Democrat Dick Durbin and Republican Mark Kirk, said the lack of leadership at ATF has hampered efforts to keep guns from criminals and combat gangs and drug cartels.

Durbin sits on the Judiciary Committee, which has not yet scheduled a confirmation hearing.

Traver turned down an interview request from the Tribune, but his portrait emerges through information he gave the committee and interviews with acquaintances, who spoke on condition of anonymity since he has not won Senate approval.

Traver was born in New York state and grew up in Elgin and West Dundee, west of Chicago. In 1985 he graduated summa cum laude from Northern Illinois University, and in 1987 he joined the ATF as a street agent in Chicago.

Writing to the committee, Traver said the ATF's Chicago division and its partner agencies have "struck significant blows against some of the most prolific, entrenched and violent street gangs in Chicago, such as the Latin Kings, the Vice Lords and the Black Gangster Disciples."

Patrick Fitzgerald, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, said Traver's response to gangs has been "excellent," noting that Aurora's murder rate plummeted after Traver helped crack down on the Insane Deuces there beginning in 2005. Aurora had 26 murders in 2002, but two in 2008.

Traver, a Navy veteran, has helped troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer at age 44 in 2008, and he's been active in peer support for others with the same cancer.

But the National Association for Gun Rights in Fort Collins, Colo., called Traver an "anti-gun thug … an enemy of liberty and an enemy of gun owners," in the words of its executive director, Dudley Brown. He said the group would "like to repeal the ability of the ATF to even exist."

The top Republican on the judiciary panel is Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, whose spokeswoman, Beth Pellett Levine, said the NRA's concerns, or those of any group, should be explored at a confirmation hearing.

The NRA lobbies Congress heavily and gives favored candidates big bucks. Its political action committee spent $14.8 million on federal elections in two years ending Dec. 31, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. It dropped $119,000 on Grassley's race alone and in November, he won a sixth term in the Senate.

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-02-16/news/ct-met-atf-gun-lobby-0217-20110216_1_street-gangs-insane-deuces-andrew-traver

KETV.com

Bills Allowing Guns In Neb. Schools Sparks Debate

School Safety Needs To Be Top Priority, Legislators Say

Legislators are proposing two bills to allow Nebraska schools' staff to bring guns to school following a shooting at Millard South High School last month.
School officials and legislators agreed that school safety needs to be a top priority, but a disagreement came over the issue of who should carry guns and if school staff really needs the firepower.
 
“Everybody in Nebraska is talking about school security,” said Andy Allen, president of Nebraska Firearms Association.
 
School officials said one of the bills would allow off-duty police officers, contracted to work for a school, to carry a weapon.
 
“We feel this is extremely important to have that security presence here and have somebody there that is trained to respond to an emergency if so needed,” said Bill Kuehn, director of security at Lincoln Public Schools.
 
The second bill, which would give trained school staff and teachers the option to pack heat, was met with disapproval.
 
“I think it's ludicrous to suggest that we should allow our classroom instructors to be armed,” said Sen. Brenda Council.
 
The bill's creator, Sen. Mark Christensen, said his constituents in western Nebraska don't have the resources found on the eastern side of the state.
 
“Sometime, we don't even have enough police and sheriffs in town, communities that we would like to have,” Christensen said.
 
This is why, Christensen said, his fellow lawmakers need to give his bill a closer look.
 
“I agree (that) the bigger districts don't need it. They have the resources and people on staff. (But) western Nebraska would have the option if they feel they need it,” Christensen said.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Gun safety starts with finger off the trigger
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 16, 2011


With efforts underway to makecarrying a concealed weapon legal in the District, I wanted to know what kind of training you'd need to do so safely. George Lyon, who is among those leading the charge, offered to give me a primer.

"Let's see if I can make a ragged hole," he said during our recent get-together at the National Rifle Association shooting range in Fairfax County. Using a Glock 31 semiautomatic handgun, Lyon proceeded to put three shots in the same spot on a paper-plate target 21 feet away.

"From that distance, it can take someone about 1.5 seconds to reach you," he said. "That's about how much time you have to decide whether to shoot or not."

Lyon, who lives in Northwest Washington, looks more like a bookworm than a gunslinger. But the 57-year-old communications lawyer is quick on the draw, and he's dead-on accurate with a variety of firearms - including the AR-15 semiautomatic rifle that he registered before the District banned them.

He was one of the plaintiffs in the 2008 Supreme Court case that loosened restrictions on gun ownership in the District, and now he's party to a lawsuit seeking the right to carry a gun on the streets.

He might not have to wait for a court decision. A bill introduced in Congress last week would further weaken D.C. gun laws by repealing the ban on semiautomatics such as the AR-15, make it easier to purchase and register guns and "ensure that firearms may be transported and carried for legitimate purposes."

"I compare carrying a gun with wearing a seat belt," Lyon told me. "You don't buckle up expecting to be in a car accident. But if you get into one, the seat belt gives you a better chance of survival."

Now it was my turn to face off with the paper plate.

After attaching a holster and ammo clips to my belt, Lyon handed me a Glock 26 subcompact - one of eight firearms he owns and his likely choice to carry concealed.

If that plate had been somebody's head, the ragged hole that Lyon made would have been located between the eyes. One of my shots took off what could have been a piece of ear.

While admiring my handiwork, I heard Lyon yell through the din of gunfire from the other shooting stalls: "Finger off the trigger!"

Finger off the trigger until you're ready to fire: such a simple, basic rule of gun safety, and yet so easy to forget.

As I began to holster the firearm, Lyon yelled, "Stop!" That darn finger again. Holstering a gun with a finger on the trigger is how people shoot themselves in the foot, he explained.

During the practice session, we discussed myriad critical issues relating to the use of firearms for self-defense: situational awareness, mental fitness, threat assessment, when to shoot, when to run, tactical reloading, malfunction repair under fire, scanning for innocent bystanders, not scaring off witnesses who can testify that you acted properly, what to do with your gun when police show up and on and on.

Most states don't require gun owners to have any meaningful training. The District, which still has among the strictest rules for gun ownership in the country, requires only four hours of classroom instruction and one hour on the shooting range.

"I certainly have my concerns about that," said Lyon, who has spent more than 300 hours shooting and attended some of the best firearms training schools in the country. "I would prefer that the city institute a scheme that requires adequate training to issue a concealed or open-carry permit."

That's easier said than done.

I'd been so mesmerized by the kick of the gun, the flash from the barrel, ejected shell casings flying everywhere, the smell of gun smoke and the adrenaline rush from nicking that paper plate that I didn't realize my finger was still curled through the trigger guard, unaware if only for a moment that the pistol was primed for an accidental discharge.
But a moment is all it takes for a tragedy to occur. Who knows what else I'd forget while walking the streets with a gun on my hip?

"Give me another couple of hours on the range with you, and I'll have you to the point where you'll feel comfortable carrying a gun," Lyon said.

As knowledgeable and patient as Lyon was, however, I knew it would take longer than that. A whole lot longer.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/15/AR2011021506321_pf.html

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Connecticut Lawmaker Pushes First-in-Nation State Registry for Gun Offenders

By Judson Berger

A Connecticut lawmaker wants to create the country's first state registry for people convicted of gun crimes, a proposal he says will help police track and deter repeat offenders. Opponents worry it'll be a costly, unnecessary and excessive step.

State Senate Majority Leader Martin Looney got the idea from several cities, including New York and Baltimore, which already have instituted gun-offender registries. The Connecticut Democrat, who represents a city experiencing a rash of gun violence, says early evidence suggests the established programs are having a "deterrent" effect.

"Gun-offender registry acts help combat gun violence by requiring proactive monitoring of gun offenders, which discourages them from re-offending," he testified before a state legislative committee last week.

Under his proposal, gun offenders -- either after their conviction or release from jail -- would have to provide the state with "personal information" including their address and photograph. For a period of four years, the offenders would have to update the state whenever they move and check in with local law enforcement once a year. There would be a criminal penalty for not registering.

Looney stressed in his testimony that, unlike sex-offender registries, the information would not be made public and would only be available to law enforcement. That means curious neighbors could not try to map out where the gun offenders in their community live, something anybody can do with the information found in sex-offender registries.
But Robert Crook, director of the Coalition of Connecticut Sportsmen, said he doesn't understand why law enforcement officials can't just use the information in the national gun offender database, combined with their own files, to track suspects.

"There's no reason ... why they can't do this on their own" without state legislation, he said. Plus, he said, the proposed requirements on gun offenders after they've served their time pose an unfair "imposition" on them.

Crook said he received assurances from the senator that the proposal would be limited only to select categories of violent gun crimes, but noted that he hasn't seen anything in writing.

Though the Megan's Law-inspired sex-offender registries are the most well-known databases for specific offenders, local jurisdictions have started to consider and approve other styles of registries in recent years. California has a database for arsonists. Suffolk County, on Long Island, approved the first-in-the-nation registry for animal abusers last year. Unlike the proposed gun-offender registry, this one will be open to the public.

Crook questioned where the registries would stop.

"Hell, if we're going to have a gun-offender registry, let's have a domestic-violence registry. Let's have a carjacking registry ... you can go on and on and on," he said.
But Looney, who represents the city of New Haven, has earned the support of local and state law enforcement officials at a time when some violent crime in his city is rising. According to the New Haven Register, the number of firearm-related homicides in New Haven nearly doubled, to 22, in 2010.

Looney could not be reached for comment by FoxNews.com.

According to the organization Mayors Against Illegal Guns, the registries tackle the problem of recidivism among gun offenders. The organization reported that in Baltimore, 42 percent of those charged with felony gun offenses have previous arrests on gun crimes -- Looney cited this statistic in making his case to the state Senate last week.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Guns in church?: Legislation proposes loosening Michigan's rules on where concealed weapons are allowed

Published: Sunday, February 13, 2011, 10:05 AM     Updated: Sunday, February 13, 2011, 10:47 AM

By Rex Hall Jr. | Kalamazoo Gazette
KALAMAZOO — Supporters say it would give law-abiding citizens with concealed-weapon permits the ability to even better protect themselves — and others — from harm.

Detractors question the logic and whether passage of the legislation could create a danger by unnecessarily allowing firearms into otherwise safe — and gun-free — environments.

The debate surrounds a measure introduced last month in Lansing that would repeal a section of the state’s concealed-carry law that prohibits permit holders from carrying their firearms into schools, churches, day care centers, sports arenas, bars and college dorms and buildings, among other places.

The amendment was introduced by state Sen. Mike Green, R-Mayville, who, as a state representative, sponsored the concealed weapons law approved by legislators a decade ago that made it easier to get a permit for a concealed weapon.

 
Green said he did not want gun-free zones included in the original law but compromised because of concerns raised by others.

There have been relatively few incidents since the law was passed 10 years ago, he said, evidence that citizens can be responsible in any environment.

“Frankly, I think someone in our schools need to have a gun,” Green said.

Phil Reames, a certified firearms instructor and chairman of the Kalamazoo County Gun Board, said he believes Green’s legislation is a move in the right direction to bring Michigan in line with other states.

 
Indiana, for example, has concealed-carry laws without gun-free zones and has experienced few, if any, problems, he said.

“(Permit holders) aren’t the people you have to worry about,” Reames said. “These are the law-abiding citizens. They’re not out there causing trouble.”

Even so, Kalamazoo County Undersheriff Pali Matyas said Green and the legislation are “misguided.”  He doubts the bill will come out of committee with the repeal of gun-free zones.

“There’s just no reason to be going to school and some of these places with a gun on your belt and then claim that it’s my constitutional freedom to do that,” Matyas said.

 
“I don’t think the constitution was meant to be applied for individual persons’ individual agendas and that seems to be what’s happening.

“Sooner or later, you have to insert common sense.”

Opinions differ

Other local law enforcement officials agree with Matyas.
Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety Chief Jeff Hadley said he thinks both sides in the debate offer valid points.

 
But he questions whether eliminating the gun-free zones could pose a safety issue and if it would change how police respond to emergencies at those venues where concealed weapons would be allowed if the legislation passed.

“I see there’s a lot more downside than upside in terms of where I sit as Public Safety chief and responding to some of those locations,” Hadley said.
“It’s going to change the way we approach things and that would probably be the most prominent downside. The problem being that police officers don’t know who is who in a stressful, rapidly evolving situation.”

In Kent County, Sheriff Larry Stelma believes eliminating the gun-free zones is a “moot” issue and doesn’t envision any trouble with concealed-weapon permit holders having weapons at churches and schools.

Stelma said he can only recall one or two instances since 2001 in which someone has
violated his or her concealed-weapons permit.

Kalamazoo County Prosecutor Jeff Fink said his office’s experience with permit holders has been similar to that described by Stelma.

 
He said that despite his concerns in 2001 that changes to the concealed-weapons law would cause safety issues, those problems have not materialized. 

 
He said his office has not seen a significant number of cases of permit holders using their firearms inappropriately.

Fink said he has not reviewed Green’s legislation, which is before a Senate judiciary committee, and declined to comment on it.

But he did say he agreed with Ottawa County Prosecutor Ron Frantz, who opposes the bill and said he’s “not convinced it’s necessary or appropriate.”

Jared Fulton, a senior training counselor with the National Rifle Association and co-owner of the Southside Sportsman Club and Freedom Firearms in Battle Creek, said he doesn’t believe problems would arise if law-abiding permit holders are allowed to carry firearms in areas where they are now outlawed.

“I don’t carry a gun to be a big macho man,” Fulton said. “I carry a gun because I know there are bad people out there, and I want to go home to my kids tonight.

“If the law passes and people use it with common sense ... and be the law-abiding citizens that we already are, I don’t think there are going to be any problems.”
Contact Rex Hall Jr. at rhall@kalamazoogazette.com or 269-388-7784. The Gazette News Service contributed to this report.

© 2011 MLive.com. All rights reserved.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Need quick entry into Texas Capitol? Just get a gun permit

(Reuters) - Security is newly tightened at the Texas Capitol, but plenty of gun-toting visitors can breeze right through.

Concealed handgun license holders walk through a special lane marked "CHL Access" around, and not through, the metal detectors put in place last year after a man fired shots outside the statehouse.

Schoolchildren and tourists, meanwhile, have to walk through metal detectors and put their bags and keys through scanners. One of the busiest times is now, when the legislature, which meets biennially, is convened.

Richard Robertson, a concealed handgun license holder who visited the Capitol on Saturday, is glad guns are allowed in the statehouse.

"It's not the Wild West mentality where I'm hoping to get into a fight, but if some lunatic tries something, I'd feel better having the means to put an end to it," said Robertson, general manager of a construction company in Austin.

"Around here, it's not that big of a deal (to have a gun at the Capitol). Someone from out of state may think we're a bunch of yahoos."

Texas officials said that state troopers stationed at the checkpoints look at concealed handgun licenses to make sure they are valid.

"It's not like they just whoosh on through," said Tela Mange, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Public Safety. Permit holders must undergo criminal background checks and take classes to get the licenses.

But they do move through quickly enough that lobbyists, and even some journalists, have signed up in droves for the $140 licenses, even if they have no intention of carrying a weapon into the statehouse.

The fear of getting stuck in line behind hundreds of schoolchildren led Carrie Kroll, director of advocacy and health policy for the Texas Pediatric Society, to get her concealed handgun license ahead of the legislative session.

"Do I think it's silly?" Kroll asked. "Yes."

She proposed that frequent visitors to the Capitol should have quicker access rather than using the CHL lanes.

State Sen. Dan Patrick, a Houston Republican and one of the state's more than 460,000 concealed handgun license holders, said he carries his gun at the Capitol nearly all the time.

It was Patrick's office that gunman Fausto Cardenas visited before firing several shots on the Capitol steps last year. No one was injured, and Patrick was not there at the time.

"I don't ever want to be in a situation where I don't have the chance to defend myself, my family or my friends," said Patrick, who is pushing legislation to allow concealed handguns on college campuses. "We live in a world where you can encounter danger at home or work or on the street."

Carrying a license and a gun "tends to make you a little more aware, more alert," he said.

Last year, Republican Gov. Rick Perry, who opposed the metal detectors at the Capitol entrances, had his .380 pistol with him while jogging in the Austin area and has said when he came across a coyote, he shot it dead.
(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Greg McCune)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/02/12/us-texas-guns-idUSTRE71B2LC20110212