When
two teams of cowardly Muslim extremist terrorists stormed the Westgate
shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya last month, police and government forces
were slow to respond, but local gun owners were not. Kenya has very
strict gun laws, banning most semi-auto rifles, and tightly restricting
possession of handguns, but, like New York City, those with the right
connections, enough money, and who are persistent enough, can own, and
even carry, personal defense handguns. One such concealed carry license
holder was standing in line at a bank in the mall when the shooting
started. A New York Times story
from September 26 reported that the man, identified as Raju,
immediately sent out an urgent text message to friends in his shooting
club. The story then says that shooting club members, neighborhood
watch volunteers (like George Zimmerman?), and “plainclothes police
officers” rushed to the mall and gave the terrorists something to worry
about while they helped people trying to get out of the besieged
buildings.
While the Times
story focused primarily on the delayed response of the police and
military, the fact that it even mentioned armed civilians as first
responders is pretty shocking to those of us in the rights movement who
have suffered the slings and arrows of the Times’ anti-gun bias
for decades. For them to even mention Raju and his friends from the gun
club is pretty significant, though we assume it was an aberration and
don’t expect any shift in the Times’ position on guns and the right to arms. Apparently the Times thinks private gun owners in Kenya are somehow more responsible than private gun owners in the US though.
It
should be noted that the Westgate mall in Nairobi is not a posted “No
Guns” zone. Few people in the country have the legal right to carry
personal defense firearms, the whole country is considered a “gun free
zone” with exceptions made for those authorized by the government. Here
in the US, where millions of people exercise their right to carry
personal defense firearms, criminals and lunatics bent on killing as
many people as possible almost always choose a location that forbids
legal, civilian firearms. The deranged punk who attacked the audience
of the Batman movie in Colorado, for instance, passed by two other,
larger theaters, to get to the theater where he carried out his attack.
The difference was that the other theaters were not posted. Why would
he do that unless he was hoping to reduce the chances of running into
armed resistance inside the theater? An exception to that rule was the
attack at the Gabby Giffords meet and greet, which occurred in a grocery
store parking lot in Tucson. In that atrocity, one of the civilian
first responders who helped to subdue the attacker was carrying a gun,
but he arrived a few seconds too late to need to use it. Had one of the
victims not interfered with the mad man’s reload, that armed citizen –
who, like the gun owners in Kenya had rushed to the sound of the gunfire
– would have been the only thing standing between the people in that
parking lot and at least another 15 rounds of 9mm.
The Times didn’t
include any photos of Raju and his gun club compatriots, but a Reuters
photo from inside the mall caught the particular attention of the
shooting fraternity. The photo shows several men in civilian clothes,
carrying handguns, and moving tactically through the mall. What really
caught our attention was that one of those men was wearing a vest that
bore the familiar logo of the International Defensive Pistol
Association, or IDPA.
IDPA
is a competitive shooting organization similar to the US Practical
Shooting Association, or USPSA. My brother and I belong to USPSA and
write a regular column for their magazine, Front Sight.
Both organizations are focused on competitive, action-style shooting,
what some used to call combat shooting, which involves engaging multiple
targets with pistol, rifle, or shotgun in a timed course. Scenarios
and courses vary from competition to competition and can be very
challenging. The fast pace and excitement of the sport has made it one
of the fastest-growing shooting sports in the country – rivaled only by
Cowboy Action Shooting sanctioned by the Single Action Shooters Society
(SASS). Cowboy Action is basically the same sport only using
pre-1900-style firearms and having competitors dressed up in classic
western garb. Anyone not familiar with these sports should do a search
on YouTube for IDPA, USPSA, and SASS. You’ll be amazed.
The
practical aspects of these types of competition can come into play in a
situation like the assault on Westgate mall. Shooters who regularly
compete in these sports know how to move safely with gun in hand, use
cover, clear corners, and fire with speed and accuracy. More
importantly, they have practiced distinguishing between targets and
“No-Shoots” representing bystanders and hostages – the courses routinely
include such distinctions. Action shooters have also practiced
shooting from a variety of different positions and at targets of varying
distances. At this point it is unclear whether any of the gun club
members actively engaged any of the terrorists, nor do we expect to hear
such details from the Times. What is clear is that these club
shooters were willing to risk their own lives to help their fellow
citizens – of every race and creed – and they did it with no reports of
any of them accidentally shooting an innocent or being shot themselves
by government troops or police.
Opponents
of armed resistance say that “more guns in a situation like that is
just a recipe for disaster,” but as has been repeatedly proven, it is
not the presence of defensive firearms, but their absence that increases
death tolls. This case again proves the point. The presence of these
armed civilians during the Westgate mall attack undoubtedly saved many
lives.
Permission
to reprint or post this article in its entirety is hereby granted
provided this credit and link is included. Text is available at www.FirearmsCoalition.org.
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Hard Corps Report, write to PO Box 1761, Buckeye, AZ 85326. Copyright
© 2013 Neal Knox Associates – The most trusted name in the rights
movement.
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