Deutsche Welle, 23 Sep 2013
US
President Barack Obama has attended a memorial service for the victims of a
deadly mass shooting at a military facility last week. He also took the
opportunity to make the case for tighter gun-control laws.
Speaking at
the memorial service to honor the victims of the shooting rampage at the
Washington Navy Yard, US President Barack Obama on Sunday called on Americans
to overcome what he termed their "creeping resignation" about gun
violence in the country.
"I'm
here today to say there's nothing routine about this tragedy. There's nothing
routine about your loss," the president said, directly addressing the
families of the 12 victims who were gunned down at the navy facility last
Monday.
He also
noted that the rate of the deadly use of guns was much higher in the United
States than in many of its other developed nations such as Britain or
Australia. Then he made an impassioned plea for tougher US gun control
legislation.
"If we
really want to honor these 12 men and women, we really want to be a country
where we can go do work and go to school and walk our streets free from
senseless violence without so many lives being stolen by a bullet from a gun,
we are going to have to change," the president said.
President
Obama had proposed tighter gun control legislation earlier this year, in light
of a mass shooting that killed 26 people at an elementary school in the eastern
state of Connecticut last December. However, the US Congress rejected the
proposals, which among other things would have seen sales of certain types of
guns restricted and background checks required for the sale of more types of
weapons.
The
measures were also strongly opposed by the powerful lobby group, the US
National Rifle Association.
Monday's
shootings have been blamed on Aaron Alexis, a 34-year-old former Navy reservist
and information technology contractor who had a record of mental illness and
previous run-ins with police. Monday's rampage ended after he was shot dead in
a gun battle with police.
pfd/lw (AP, Reuters, AFP)

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.