MOMS’ MARCH ON WASHINGTON FOR GUN CONTROL

Published: 16 May 2000 y., Tuesday
In the capital of one of the most violent countries in the world, women who have lost children to guns joined others who fear for their children's lives in the "Million Mom March" to demand that Congress pass "common sense gun control." Similar rallies were held in 70 others cities across the country, including Los Angeles, Chicago, Denver, Seattle and Austin, Texas. Accompanied by children and some husbands, the women demanded legislation requiring all gun owners to obtain licenses and register their handguns. In the United States, home to 192 million privately owned firearms, an average of 80 people, including 12 children, are shot to death each day. Each year, an estimated 30,000 Americans die from gunshot wounds, including suicides and accidental shootings, and one out of every four Americans has been threatened by a firearm, according to a poll published in Sunday's Washington Post. "This is the most violent civilized country in the world, but we can do something to change that because we know prevention works," President Bill Clinton said Sunday. Clinton, whose absence in the march was designed not to detract from the mothers' role, hopes the march will pressure congressional Republicans to enact gun curbs passed by the Senate a year ago. First Lady Hillary Clinton, actress Susan Sarandon and singer Emmylou Harris joined the thousands of women carrying placards reading "Guns don't die, people do" and "Children aren't bullet-proof," as they called for tougher laws. The marchers also support measures calling for limits to the number of guns individuals may own, trigger locks and background checks at gun shows.
Šaltinis: EFE
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

The allegations

Polish ministers questioned over bribery allegations more »

The increased benefits

Estonian parliament raises support for second child more »

Central bank chief fails to illuminate

Latvia's hottest politician, though not yet officially in politics, popped out for lunch Nov. 6 to host a press conference in which he spoke of his future party's health care program. more »

Security Minister Resigns Amid Media Scandal

Georgia's Security Minister Vakhtang Kutateladze today submitted his resignation, following a raid by security police on the country's main private television station. more »

Americans asked to limit movement

The US Embassy in Riyadh has asked thousands of Americans living and working in the Kingdom to limit their movement to avert possible retaliatory actions following the launch of air strikes on Afghanistan. more »

Nobel Peace Prize

United Nations, Secretary-General Kofi Annan Win Nobel Peace Prize more »

Americans on alert for retaliation

State Department warns of threat more »

Investigators follow trail overseas

Funding for plot financed with $500,000 bankroll more »

UNEMPLOYMENT INCREASE

On September 1 in Belarus were 103,3 thousand unemployed. more »

ID Cards Are de Rigueur Worldwide

Although renewed calls for a national identity card have sparked a heated debate in the United States in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, such cards are the norm in most of the world. more »