Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that his government was slapping a ban on trade of handguns to prevent mass-shootings in the country.
He said that the new legislation will usher in “some of the strongest gun control measures” in decades, including a “freeze” on the buying and selling of handguns in the country.
In a news conference in Ottawa on Monday evening, Trudeau invoked a string of mass shootings in Canada over the past decades, as well as recent attacks in the United States, as part of his government’s impetus to introduce Bill C-21.

“Canadians all agree that we need less gun violence. We cannot let the guns debate become so polarised that nothing gets done. We cannot let that happen in our country,” Trudeau told reporters.
“Gun violence is a complex problem, but at the end of the day, the math is really quite simple. The fewer the guns in our communities, the safer everyone will be.”

Canada has stricter gun ownership restrictions than the US, but gun control advocates in recent years have called for tougher measures amid a string of mass shootings, including a 2017 assault on a Quebec mosque that killed six worshippers and a deadly shooting in Toronto in 2018.
In 2020, Trudeau’s government banned more than 1,500 models and variants of “assault-style” firearms in the aftermath of a deadly attack in the eastern province of Nova Scotia that year.

