Gun Control In Bolivia, Before And After
BY Herschel Smith4 years, 12 months ago
This came from reddit/firearms. But the sources are mine.
Bolivia has enacted its first firearms legislation, which may be unlikely to have a dramatic impact on the country’s already low murder rate, but will at least provide the state with the tools to tackle arms trafficking.
Laying out strict limitations on who can own a weapon, the Firearms, Munitions, Explosives and Other Materials Control Law was passed on September 18 — four years after it was first proposed in 2009 — reported El Diario.
The legislation sets a six month period for current gun owners to register or turn in weapons before becoming subject to a maximum six year sentence for ownership or five year sentence for carrying an illegal weapon, with longer sentences for military-grade weapons, reported Los Tiempos. It also establishes a maximum 30 year sentence for any member of the security forces caught trafficking arms.
As well as regulating arms, the law allows for the production of “any kind” of weapon at the request of the armed forces or police, pending approval from the interior and defense ministries, reported La Razon.
I am writing from Bolivia just days after witnessing the November 19 military massacre at the Senkata gas plant in the indigenous city of El Alto, and the tear-gassing of a peaceful funeral procession on November 21 to commemorate the dead. These are examples, unfortunately, of the modus operandi of the de facto government that seized control in the coup that forced the recently re-elected president Evo Morales out of power.
The coup has spawned massive protests, with blockades set up around the country as part of a national strike calling for the resignation of this new government. One well-organized blockade is in El Alto, where residents set up barriers surrounding the Senkata gas plant, stopping tankers from leaving the plant and cutting off La Paz’s main source of gasoline.
Determined to break the blockade, the government sent in helicopters, tanks, and heavily armed soldiers in the evening of November 18. The next day, mayhem broke out when the soldiers began tear-gassing residents, then shooting into the crowd.
I arrived just after the shooting. The furious residents took me to local clinics where the wounded were taken. I saw the doctors and nurses desperately trying to save lives, carrying out emergency surgeries in difficult conditions with a shortage of medical equipment. I saw five dead bodies and dozens of people with bullet wounds. Some had just been walking to work when they were struck by bullets.
A grieving mother whose son was shot cried out between sobs: “They’re killing us like dogs.” In the end, there were 8 confirmed dead.
The next day, a local church became an improvised morgue, with the dead bodies — some still dripping blood — lined up in pews and doctors performing autopsies.
You hate to see more examples of what history has already taught us, but those who refuse to learn the lessons of history suffer for their refusal.
On November 25, 2019 at 10:38 pm, BRVTVS said:
The gun control laws which left Morales’ band of merry communists disarmed were passed by Morales and intended to disarm the anti-communists. I don’t feel a bit bad about them getting their comeuppance. Be glad it’s communists suffering for once. It was intended to be people like us.
On November 26, 2019 at 7:02 am, RM said:
Substitute Virginia for Bolivia, change a few location names and ponder the near future the communist government in Richmond has in store for the Old Dominion. Hyperbole?
Not when you have a governor who is perfectly comfortable with infanticide.
On November 26, 2019 at 7:32 am, ragman said:
This is exactly where we are headed if/when we are disarmed. Like the Captain said, it’s always the same same scenario that plays out. Virginia could very well be our first real test. If the folks that live in western VA are anything like the folks that live in western NC where I am, Richmond will open up a whole can of whup-ass if they try to confiscate guns.