The United States constitution, which was
written over two hundred years ago, enshrines an individual's
right to keep and bear arms.
In 2000, the FBI estimated that 66% of the 15,517
murders that year were committed with firearms.
Fatal shootings in recent years, many involving
teenagers, has made the issue of gun control a key debate in US
politics.
The United States has the largest number of guns in
private hands of any country in the world with 60 million people
owning a combined arsenal of over 200 million firearms.
The US constitution, which was written in 1787,
enshrines the people's right to keep and bear arms in its Second
Amendment.
It reads: 'A well regulated militia, being necessary to
the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep
and bear arms, shall not be infringed.'
Although guns are permitted everywhere, the laws
governing gun use vary considerably from state to state.
Gun Control, Not Prohibition
Amending the Constitution to prohibit guns is rarely
discussed as many Americans view the right to bear arms as an
important civil liberty.
Instead, the issue is whether or not it is lawful to
impose stricter controls on gun usage.
Proposed gun control legislation has concerned
child-proof locks, background checks on gun purchasers, the
outlawing of some types of assault weapons and, most recently,
the creation of a nationwide database of ballistic fingerprints
in order to track the movement of the nation's guns.
American opinion is divided between those who insist on
the universal right to bear arms and those who advocate stricter
controls.
The influential firearms lobby, headed by the National
Rifle Association (NRA), believes gun ownership to be a
personal and moral right and dismisses the link between gun
ownership and high gun violence with its slogan 'Guns don't kill
people, people kill people.'
Advocates of firearm control argue that the Second
Amendment is anachronistic belonging to the long-gone days of
the frontier. They point to the high levels of gun-related
murder and violent crime in the US to stress the need for
reform.
The issue of removing the number of guns that are
already in circulation is rarely discussed.
More Controls
In the past decade, public opinion has been gradually
moved in favour of stricter gun control laws. In January 2001,
59% of the respondents in an ABC News/Washington Post survey
said they favoured stricter gun control laws.
After the horrific events in 1999 at Columbine High
School in Colorado when two students shot dead 13 fellow
students and each other, polls showed that two-thirds of
Americans supported greater gun control measures. Moreover, 15
state legislatures passed significant gun control bills.
The case of the Washington Sniper, who terrorised the
suburbs of the nation's capital in late 2002 in a month-long
shooting spree, killing 10 people and seriously wounding three,
swiftly brought the issue of gun control onto the table once
again.
However, any new gun control legislation that comes
before the Congress is sure to be vetoed by President George W.
Bush, who is a long-time ally of the NRA.
While he was governor of Texas, the President signed
laws making it legal to carry concealed weapons and difficult
for citizens to sue gun manufacturers.