The Borneo Post

US senators reach deal on gun-sale background checks

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WASHINGTON: Senators struck a hard-fought compromise Wednesday that could expand US background checks to all commercial firearms sales, which may result in the most ambitious change to gun laws since 1994.

The deal comes four months after a massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticu­t, which left 20 young children and six adults dead and took America’s epidemic of gun violence to an alarming new level.

“We have an agreement on an amendment to prevent criminals and the mentally ill and insane from getting firearms,” said Democrat Joe Manchin, from the pro- gun state of West Virginia, as he unveiled the measure.

The amendment would see background checks – the core of President Barack Obama’s

We have an agreement on an amendment to prevent criminals and the mentally ill and insane from getting firearms. Joe Manchin, Senator

gun control push – expanded to include all sales at gun shows and on the Internet, said Manchin and Republican Pat Toomey, the deal’s architects.

Despite falling short of the president’s proposal for universal background checks, Obama noted the ‘significan­t bipartisan progress’ of the compromise while warning that much work remains.

Michelle Obama also got involved, making an emotional appeal for fresh legislatio­n in murder-plagued Chicago, her hometown, likening the situation in some of the city’s neighborho­ods to a war zone.

Recalling the shooting death of 15-year- old Chicagoan a week after she performed at Obama’s second inaugurati­on, the first lady said: “Hadiya Pendleton was me, and I was her.

“But I got to grow up, and go to Princeton and to Harvard Law School, and have a family and the most blessed life I could imagine. And Hadiya we know that story.”

Some Republican­s discount the gun control compromise as a non- starter, but Democrats are focusing on rival lawmakers they believe can still be persuaded.

Toomey, from Pennsylvan­ia where many rural communitie­s support gun rights, appeared to poke a hole in the argument that any new gun control measures should be viewed as an infringeme­nt of the constituti­onal right to bear arms.

“I don’t consider criminal background checks to be gun control,” said Toomey, who like Manchin is a gun owner and hunter.

“It’s just common sense. If you pass a criminal background check, you get to buy a gun.”

Their amendment, aided by Republican Mark Kirk from Illinois, stops short of the universal background checks sought by Obama in the aftermath of Sandy Hook.

Specifical­ly, it would not affect person-to-person sales, such as those between relatives.

But it would strengthen existing law, which currently only requires background checks when guns are purchased from a licensed dealer. — AFP

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