Superior Court Judge Jean-François de Grandpré
The order issued on Thursday took effect immediately, just hours before the bill abolishing the gun registry was given royal assent. The interim ruling will be enforced for a week, until further motions for an injunction can be argued next week.
In Ottawa, the Conservatives celebrated the demise of the registry, with one MP paraphrasing Martin Luther King to the cheers of his colleagues in the House of Commons.
“Free at last, free at last,” said New Brunswick MP John Williamson
The U.S. civil-rights leader was killed 44
The Quebec government hopes to receive a temporary injunction to protect the data until a permanent ruling, which could take months, can be obtained.
“So for a week it [the gun registry] is still there. Of course it’s good news but it’s just a first step,” Quebec Justice Minister Jean-Marc Fournier
In its brief to the court, Quebec argued that the registry helped reduce gun-related crimes, suicides and homicides. Police in Quebec consulted the registry an average of 700 times a day, the province argued, making the registry an instrumental tool in investigations.
The federal government made it clear from the outset that it would destroy the data as soon as it could in accordance with a provision in the newly passed law.
“As soon as the legislation is passed, there is a requirement to destroy the data. If there’s no legal impediment to destroying the data, that process continues,” said federal Minister of Public Safety Vic Toews
In statement released by his office, Mr. Toews said that the court ruling was temporary and in no way “diminished our commitment to ending the long-gun registry once and for all.”
The minister expressed disappointment with the court decision, saying it went against the “will of Canadians and of Parliament.”
Rather than battling in court, Quebec urged Ottawa to help the province set up its own gun registry, using the data collected in Quebec since 1998.
“The federal government can still change its mind and accept to co-operate. The victims of firearms and their families are making the same request,” Mr. Fournier said.
Quebec was at the forefront of the movement to set up the gun registry after the deaths of 14 women during the 1989
Heidi Rathjen
“The Conservatives in Ottawa want nothing to do with the gun registry. Our group appeared before the Senate committee last week. It was a real joke. It was nothing more than a political spectacle,” Ms. Rathjen said on Thursday.
She said that the registry works and it would be ridiculous for Ottawa to abolish the data and impede Quebec’s will to maintain it.