Brazilians soundly rejected a proposal to ban gun sales in a national referendum that stirred a fierce debate in a country with one of the world's highest gun death rates.
With more than 95 percent of the votes counted on Sunday, 64 percent of Brazilians were opposed to the ban, while 36 percent backed it, said officials at the Supreme Electoral Court, giving the "No" position an insurmountable lead.
"They didn't vote in favor of guns, they voted to protest the government and the lack of a national security policy," said Antonio Rangel, coordinator of the gun control campaign at the Viva Rio think tank. "Two months ago we had 81 percent support for the ban, this shows that less than 20 percent of the population really believe in guns. The rest was protest."
PHOTO: AP
But those who opposed the ban said it was more than that.
"The `No' aside from being a protest is a reaction to the attempt to take a right away from the citizen," said Representative Alberto Fraga, who led the congressional lobby against the ban. "If the ban was approved the bandits would have been overjoyed with incompetence of the state."
Brazil has 100 million fewer citizens than the US, but a staggering 25 percent more gun deaths at nearly 40,000 a year. While supporters argued that gun control was the best way to staunch the violence, opponents played on Brazilians' fears that the police can't protect them.
"I don't like people walking around armed on the street. But since all the bandits have guns, you need to have a gun at home," said taxi driver Mohammed Osei, who voted against the ban.
The proposal would have prohibited the sale of firearms and ammunition except for police, the military, some security guards, gun collectors and sports shooters. It would complement a 2003 disarmament law that sharply restricts who can legally purchase firearms and carry guns on the street.
That law, coupled with a government-sponsored gun buyback program, has reduced deaths from firearms by about 8 percent this year, the Health Ministry said.
But the referendum backfired for proponents. Earlier this year, support for the ban was running as high as 80 percent. But in the weeks before the referendum, both sides were granted free time to present their cases on prime-time TV, and the pro-gun lobby began to grow.
Analysts said the pro-gun advocates benefited from equal time on television in the final weeks of the campaign and that they cannily cashed in on Brazilian skepticism of the police.
"They ask the question: `Do you feel protected and do you think the government is protecting you?' and the answer is a violent no," said political scientist David Fleischer of the University of Brasilia.
The combination of Brazil's high gun-death rate and the nature of the debate over the right to gun ownership has drawn parallels to the gun debate in the US, where the influential National Rifle Association, or NRA, a gun owners' lobbying group, has successfully fought off gun control legislation, citing provisions in the US Constitution guaranteeing the right to bear arms.
"The whole campaign [against the ban] was imported from the US. They just translated a lot of material from the NRA," said Jessica Galeria, a Californian who researches gun violence with the Viva Rio think tank. "Now, a lot of Brazilians are insisting on their right to bear arms, they don't even have a pseudo right to bear arms. It's not in their constitution."
In Washington, the NRA's public affairs director Andrew Arulanandam called the proposal's defeat "a victory for freedom."
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