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Pubdate: Thu, 05 Aug 2004 Source: Georgia Straight, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Georgia Straight Contact: http://www.straight.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1084 Author: Bill Tieleman Note: Bill Tieleman is a political commentator Thursdays on CBC TV's Canada Now and regularly on CBC Radio's Early Edition. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Political Connections COLEMAN'S DRUG WAR OVERLOOKS THE GUN PROBLEM You ain't disrespecting me like that/I'M GONNA GET MY GUN! Walk to the room, sixteen shot clip/Bitch how you like that? I'M GONNA GET MY GUN!/Bet you ain't know that I'm strapped Nice one, bitch this is my gat/I'M GONNA GET MY GUN! - - D12 "Get My Gun" How many people will have to be shot to death in and around nightclubs before the B.C. government's "minister for public safety" does something about it? So far the count is six dead in the past year, including a fatal shooting outside Vancouver's Aqua 1066 Restaurant and Lounge on July 25, but no action has been taken by Rich Coleman, the solicitor general and minister for public safety, to try to put an end to the violence. Coleman's ministry is responsible for policing and crime prevention, and to hear them tell it, they're doing a hell of a good job. "We take pride in our accomplishments, including: enhancing the effectiveness and efficiency of policing, supporting communities in increasing public safety, supporting victims of crime, maintaining safer streets," reads the ministry's 2003/04 annual service plan. But try telling that to nervous club patrons, staff who are quitting their jobs in fear, or bouncers who are now wearing bulletproof vests as they stand outside popular nightspots. And then take a look at cuts to the policing and community-safety budget for Coleman's ministry. From spending $267.5 million in 2003-2004, the funding for this important area will drop by $20.7 million to a projected $246.8 million for 2006-2007. I guess the reduced expenditures must mean we are all feeling safer each year. The shooting murder at Aqua 1066 was just one of the most recent; there have been many other gunshot victims. In January, 23-year-old Rachel Davis was shot to death while trying to be a peacemaker in a fight outside the Purple Onion Cabaret in Gastown. Richard Hui, 24, also died in the shooting. In August 2003, three people were killed and several injured in a gunfight at Loft Six in Gastown. The violence is not confined to downtown Vancouver, though. In January, two men were shot outside the Fraser Valley Inn in Abbotsford, and police charged two suspects with attempted murder. But we've had lots of action from Coleman's ministry. It created a special licence plate to honour armed-forces veterans, put out more "bait cars" to catch vehicle thieves, and reduced the number of inspections of truck trailers to save the industry money. But gun deaths don't seem to have provoked a serious response. Coleman has also had lots to say about "getting tough" on marijuana possession and "winning" the war on drugs. "I want us to go out and fight the war on drugs because it's hurting our kids, it's hurting our communities, and it's time we stood up to it," Coleman told CBC Radio news in December 2002. Coleman also opposed the federal government's plan to decriminalize simple possession of marijuana. Well, here's some breaking news for Coleman: in Amsterdam, where possession and sale of marijuana and hashish are legal, people are not being shot to death outside nightclubs every few weeks. In case Coleman wants to compare crime in the Netherlands and Canada, here's what the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found in a study of gun deaths published in the International Journal of Epidemiology: Canada's rate of murders, suicides, and accidental deaths due to guns per 100,000 people was 4.31 in 1994. Holland's was 0.70. So, minister for public safety, how about a war on guns, not drugs? How about getting tough on punks carrying pistols? Let's make their lives as miserable as possible, although it can't come close to the anguish of families and friends whose loved ones didn't come home one night. How about spending some serious money for police dragnets late at night near nightclubs to find the thugs who are carrying guns or stashing them in their cars? How about offering significant rewards for informants to turn in guys packing pistols? How about pressuring Ottawa to increase the penalties for unlawful possession of handguns or for smuggling them into Canada, and to make it harder to own a firearm? Oops, I forgot. Coleman also says the federal government should scrap the gun registry. Let's also forget about blaming shooting deaths on nightclubs themselves or their late opening hours. The hours of business aren't the reason certain people carry handguns, and other cities around the world have later hours without mayhem. And nightclubs can't be expected to do more than screen patrons, use metal detectors, and employ security guards. If there are clubs that are not stopping customers from entering with guns, put them out of business, permanently. All this is not to say Coleman is responsible for the problems of nightclub shootings. He's not. We live in a gun culture where popular musicians like 50 Cent and D12 celebrate violence. We live in a society where too many people think respect comes from carrying weapons, not from a decent job or contributing to their community. But Coleman is still minister of public safety, and he has the responsibility to take action in the face of out-of-control gun deaths. The "drug" Coleman should be worrying about is testosterone. It is far too readily available, and, when combined with handguns, is deadlier than any other. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake