Restore Britain leader describes Dunblane school shooting as 'one murder'
Image source, PA Media Image caption, Rupert Lowe founded Restore Britain after he was suspended from Reform UK By David Wallace Lockhart Scotland political correspondent Published 4 hours ago The leader of Restore Britain has been urged to apologise after describing the Dunblane school shooting as "one murder". Rupert Lowe was criticising the UK's ban on handguns during an appearance on the Joe Rogan podcast. He said the ban came after "there was a murder in Dunblane". Host Rogan clarified with Lowe that the ban was due to "one murder" and the Restore UK leader repeated that was the case. Sixteen children and their teacher were killed in the 1996 mass shooting in Scotland, one of the worst gun atrocities to happen in the UK. 'Our children paid the ultimate price' â How the Dunblane school shooting changed Britain Published 8 March Lowe, the MP for Great Yarmouth, said his father's pistols had been taken away after the shooting, and that society in the UK needed "radical change" and to "release the individual". Conservative MSP Stephen Kerr said Lowe's comments were "astonishingly insensitive and profoundly disrespectful to the victims of Dunblane". He said: "To describe Dunblane as 'one murder' is not simply inaccurate â it diminishes one of the darkest days in Scotland's modern history. "There is no excuse for reducing the murder of 16 children and their teacher to 'one murder'. Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Teacher Gwen Mayor and her class at Dunblane Primary School The Mid Scotland & Fife MSP criticised the "casual" and "ignorant" manner in which Lowe spoke about the tragedy. He said: "That tragedy changed Scotland forever. To speak so casually about an event that still causes such profound pain is both callous and indefensible. "He should withdraw those remarks and apologise." On 13 March 1996, gunman Thomas Hamilton entered the gym of Dunblane's primary school and murdered the 16 children and their teacher. Another 12 children and three adults were shot or injured. All but two of the children were aged just five and six. The Snowdrop campaign that followed led to the UK enforcing some of the strictest firearms legislation in the world. 'Proud legacy' Local MSP Keith Brown said Lowe was "a stain on our politics" and called his comments on the mass murder "beyond despicable." "Sixteen children and a teacher were shot dead while 15 more children were wounded," he said. "Despite these hideous remarks from Rupert Lowe, the Snowdrop Campaign that followed ensured a ban on the private ownership of most handguns - that is the proud legacy of the bereaved families and the local community." Lowe founded the political party Restore Britain as a "political movement" after he was suspended from Reform UK in March last year. His suspension came after allegations that he made threats of physical violence against then party chairman Zia Yusuf. The Crown Prosecution Service later said there was insufficient evidence for a "realistic prospect
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