Australia news live: successful amendment to NSW laws bans those investigated by police or intelligence agencies from obtaining gun licence | Australia news

NSW Greens move successful late-night amendment to gun control laws

Anne Davies

The NSW lower house will reconvene today to approve the final version of the terrorism and other offences amendment bill, which tightens up gun laws and allows police to restrict protests for up to three months after a terrorist incident.

The Greens successfully moved an amendment overnight in the upper house which goes directly to what we know about the alleged gunmen, namely that one had been on an Asio watch list and lived with his father at a house in Bonnyrigg.

The amendment says the police commissioner must be satisfied before he grants a gun licence that the applicant “has never been investigated by a Commonwealth or state law enforcement or intelligence agency for terrorism-related offences or for association with members of a proscribed terrorist organisation”.

The commissioner must also be satisfied an applicant “is not an associate or does not reside at the same residential dwelling as someone who has been investigated by a Commonwealth or state law enforcement or intelligence agency for terrorism-related offences, or for associating with members of a prescribed terrorist organisation”.

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Albanese is asked whether he will seek to work with the Nationals and visit rural constituencies to make the case for gun control, as former prime minister John Howard did after the Port Arthur Massacre.

He says:

I’ll seek to work with everyone across the system, but it clearly is not one size fits all either. There’s a recognition that someone who is a farmer on a property might have very different needs from a bloke in Bonnyrigg who got access in the current laws to six high-powered rifles and we’re about stamping inappropriate use. We don’t want to say that, you know, all gun use is the same. Quite clearly it’s not. And people who have legitimate use of guns need to be able to do so, particularly people in our farming communities.

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