What we don't have
is the practical ability to exercise that right. Owning any object for the
purpose of self-defence, lethal or non-lethal, is a criminal offence. Those
trapped within the Lindt cafe were left helpless, as carrying items for
self-defence is not allowed under State law. What's worse, the offender
possibly knew it.
Prohibited
self-defence items include pepper sprays, mace, clubs and personal Tasers. In
some states, carrying a pocket-knife is illegal and even wearing a bullet-proof
vest is banned.
Those agile enough
to retreat from an assailant can do so, and it is lawful to use items at hand
such as screwdrivers, kitchen knives and beer glasses. But for those who are
unable to flee, insufficiently strong, or with no improvised weapon, there is
no option but to rely on the police.
Prime Minister Tony
Abbott is protected by armed guards at taxpayers' expense, and the wealthy can
hire armed security guards, but everyone else relies for their safety on the
police. And as the saying goes, when seconds count the police are minutes away.
What this means is
that self-defence is not a realistic option for most people, and especially not
for the majority of women, elderly and disabled. We have become a nation
of defenceless victims.
This is not to
criticise the NSW police, who did their best in difficult circumstances. But
the police cannot be everywhere and we shouldn't expect them to keep us safe
all the time.
Australia's ban on
practical self-defence sets it apart from most other countries. Almost none
prohibit non-lethal means of self-defence, while many permit ownership of
firearms at home.
Australia's
prohibition on practical self-defence is recent, emanating from the 1996
changes in firearms laws that followed the Port Arthur massacre. Not only were
many types of firearm prohibited, but Australia embraced an international push
to prohibit civilian ownership of firearms for self-defence.
This was driven by
several factors. One was a desire to avoid America's "gun culture".
However, this was broadened to include all means of self-defence. There
was also a strange version of the precautionary principle – the wrong-headed
belief that average citizens would one day be overcome by murderous tendencies.
Then there are
perennial claims that resistance is futile and that items of self-defence can
be turned against those using them. Any woman who has fought off a would-be
rapist – and there are many – knows this to be untrue.
Mythologising about
firearms is a feature of Australian public debate. Many seriously believe the
solution to any crime involving a gun is more gun laws. And yet the offender in
the Lindt cafe did not have a gun licence and in any case the sawn-off shotgun
he was using is illegal.
Perhaps Australians
will never embrace the use of guns for self-defence except in special cases (a
battered wife dealing with a murderous ex-husband, for example). But they never
agreed to or accepted being rendered defenceless. If asked, I believe most
would unequivocally demand the right to practical self-defence, at least using
non-lethal means.
And it should never
have reached this stage. Only an authoritarian society would treat its citizens
as victims, with the government masquerading as a guardian angel. Free
societies have a strong emphasis on individual self-reliance.
Restrictions on
non-lethal means of self-defence should be removed, while methods with
potential to cause harm should be available but restricted to trained,
responsible adults; It is time to stop pretending the government can protect us
from events such as the Lindt cafe siege.
David Leyonhjelm is the Liberal
Democrats Senator for NSW.
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