Canada’s public safety department says it does not know how many guns are smuggled into the country.
“Cross-border smuggling of firearms poses a threat to the safety and security of Canada,” said the note, titled “Efforts To Address Firearms Smuggling And Trafficking.”
Similar to what the department said last December when announcing $312 million in additional spending to combat gun smuggling over five years, the note stated that “the total number of firearms successfully smuggled into Canada is unknown.”
“We are providing the Canada Border Services Agency and RCMP with the tools and resources they need to combat smuggling and trafficking such as X-ray machines,” it added.
‘Zero Percent’
In December 2021, the CBSA issued a press release, saying a total of 908 firearms were seized at the border by October that year, with handguns being the most common type (316) being confiscated.“The CBSA plays a key role in fighting organized crime by stopping dangerous weapons, drugs and illegal goods at the border,” the agency said.
“Perhaps most glaring of all are the rail mode operations, where, according to the union’s own data, as of 2019, only one one-millionth of all rail cargo was effectively being examined,” Weber said.
“Canada has almost zero examination capabilities directly at the border, due in part to geographical issues, inadequate tools, and political decisions not to force rail carriers to supply the necessary facilities.”
“In other words, there’s almost a zero percent chance that any illegal weapons entering the country via rail will ever be found,” he added.