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Analysis-Australia's gun laws riddled with loopholes and workarounds, experts say

2 0
18.12.2025

By Byron Kaye

SYDNEY, Dec 17 (Reuters) - After Australia's deadliest mass shooting in 1996, the country rushed in some of the world's toughest gun laws, including mandatory licensing and background checks, as well as registration of ​every firearm.

But a winding back of those laws, failure to update them with the internet age and growing ​complacency with background checks may have made it easier for two suspects behind Sunday's shooting during a Hanukkah celebration at Sydney's Bondi Beach to acquire weapons, gun safety experts said.

Reeling from the attack that killed 15 people, Australia is now questioning ⁠the effectiveness of laws that have become a point of national pride. Australia typically has fewer gun deaths per year than the U.S. has in a day, a statistic many Australians credit the gun laws with.

In effect, the laws are a patchwork system run by the eight state and territory police forces, negotiated by the federal government after the 1996 attack in Port Arthur, Tasmania, that killed 35 people. Tweaks by ​some states in the years since have relaxed the oversight, enabling people to acquire more weapons with less supervision, the experts said.

According to the authorities, the older shooter at ‍Bondi, named as Sajid Akram, 50, who was shot dead by police, received his ​gun licence in 2023 and had six legally owned weapons that he and his son allegedly used in the attack. In 2008, the state of New South Wales removed a mandatory 28-day cooling-off period when a person with one gun wanted more; most states have done similar.

"The idea was that for each subsequent gun, the scrutiny should be more intense because it should be more........

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