
GUN violence has once again afflicted the US in Louisville, Kentucky.
Yesterday morning, a gunman killed at least five people and injured nine more at Old National Bank in downtown Louisville, Kentucky.
The gunman was identified later as Connor Sturgeon, an employee at Old National Bank, according to interim Louisville Metro Police Chief Jacquelyn Gwinn.
He was killed by police after a shootout with authorities. There have been at least 146 mass shootings, including the attack at a school in Nashville, where three children and three adults were killed, and the mass shooting in Kentucky yesterday. Gun violence is a contemporary global human rights issue.
The country is witnessing a surge in gun violence as the gun purchase rate has reached its highest level in 2020 and 2021.
Last year, the mass shootings decreased compared with previous years, but it is rising horribly in 2023. Even the number of US kids dying by gunfire keeps rising.
In the last three years, there have been more than 600 mass shootings, almost two a day on average.
While the US does not have a single definition for “mass shootings”, the Gun Violence Archive defines a mass shooting as an incident in which four or more people are injured or killed.
Numerous observers claim that the US government’s unilateral activities have brought up new humanitarian problems worldwide.
The US government is prioritising gun ownership over fundamental human rights.
This issue is highly political, pitting gun control advocates against people fiercely protective of their right to bear arms.
Despite the vast number of guns in circulation and the sheer number of people killed by guns each year, there is a shocking lack of federal regulations that could save thousands.
The governmental bodies in the US are ignoring the connection between gun violence and the violation of human rights, resulting in more casualties every year.
Among wealthier and developed countries, the US is an outlier regarding firearm violence.
The US government seems to have allowed gun violence to become a human rights crisis.
Comprehensive access to firearms and loose regulations lead to more than 39,000 men, women, and children being killed with guns each year in the US.
Due to the gun culture, the US has topped civilian firearms ownership. It now has 120 guns per 100 population, even higher than Yemen, a country currently in one of the worst civil wars of recent times.
An estimated 2,000 people are injured by gunshots daily, and at least two million people live with firearm injuries around the globe.
Among them, the US has a far greater rate of gun violence than other nations, mainly developed nations.
Millions of people suffer the severe and long-term psychological effects of gun violence on individuals, families and their wider community.
While focusing a lot on data, statistics and ranking, we often forget the tragic stories behind each number. Each life matters, and everyone has a different story.
Gun violence is becoming a vicious cycle where the growing violence creates insecurity in peoples’ minds, which results in buying new guns to ensure their safety. The ever-increasing gun suicide rate also reveals the vulnerability inside the country.
The availability of guns and other factors contribute to the increasing rate of gun violence.
Given that the right to life is an essential human right, whether the US can effectively curb gun violence should be an important yardstick for the international community to measure its human rights.
The US authorities should work more on improving the security situation by taking effective gun control measures before the situation gets out of hand.
Besides, they should also establish a victim support mechanism to help survivors and the victims’ families to overcome the grief of losing their loved ones.
US President Joe Biden said gun violence must be tackled, but repeated shootings indicate that the problem is only worsening.
Effectively implemented gun regulation and violence prevention projects can stop the carnage.
As a first step, states should recognise firearm violence as a threat to people’s human rights, particularly their rights to life, physical integrity and security of person, and health.
The US administration should concentrate on fixing the situation in its own country first rather than offering counsel or advice to others.
It must maximise the protection of human rights, creating the safest possible environment for most people, especially those at the most significant risk.
If a state does not exercise adequate control over possessing and using firearms in the face of persistent gun violence, it could breach its obligations under international human rights law. It is yet to make a very progressive decision regarding stricter laws.
So, the US should focus on its domestic condition while promoting the same policy in its human rights and foreign policy.
Comments: letters@thesundaily.com

