Calls for SKS Rifle Sales Ban After Montreal Shooting
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The segment covers a prominent gun control group's call for an immediate halt to SKS rifle sales following a June 22, 2026, shooting in Montreal's Côte-des-Neiges neighborhood that killed a police officer, a civilian, and the suspect. It identifies the weapon as a Russian-made semi-automatic SKS, notes its current unrestricted legal status in Canada, and discusses its popularity among hunters, particularly indigenous Canadians.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately reports the incident and policy debate, drawing on police sources for the firearm details and including perspectives from PolySeSouvient and gun owners' representatives. It provides useful context on prior government consideration of a ban and indigenous opposition but omits deeper data on overall SKS involvement in homicides or exact circulation estimates. Framing treats the calls as one side of an ongoing review of firearms legislation under the current government. Viewers may miss statistical context on rifle vs. handgun use in Canadian shootings or details of the proposed exemptions for subsistence hunting.
Key Moments
Suspect used a Russian-made semi-automatic SKS rifle in the Côte-des-Neiges shooting that killed an officer, civilian, and the perpetrator.
Confirmed by Wikipedia entry and multiple news reports citing images and Radio-Canada/police sources; official police identification pending but consistent across outlets.
SKS is currently unrestricted and legally available; hundreds of thousands in circulation, popular with indigenous hunters.
Matches longstanding Canadian firearms classification and reports on treaty hunting use; exact numbers unverified but described as common.
SKS is the weapon most used in Canada in mass shootings and murders of police officers in recent years.
Supported by prior CBC reporting on specific incidents including 2018 Fredericton, 2022 Innisfil, and others.
Ottawa previously considered banning the SKS but rejected it partly due to indigenous hunters; AFN opposes ban.
Consistent with parliamentary discussions and statements from officials and groups in 2025.