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Thousands demonstrate for action on US gun violence

Demonstrators at the March For Our Lives rally near the Washington Monument today
Demonstrators at the March For Our Lives rally near the Washington Monument today

Thousands of people took to the streets in the United States today to push for action on the devastating gun violence plaguing the country.

It comes after Republican politicians repeatedly blocked efforts to enact stricter firearms laws.

Protesters of all ages streamed onto the National Mall in Washington DC, where a gun violence prevention group placed more than 45,000 white vases holding flowers - one for each person killed by a firearm in the United States in 2020.

"Protect People Not Guns," said one sign held by a protester near the Washington Monument. "Fear Has No Place In Schools," read another.

Two horrific shootings last month - one at a Texas elementary school that killed 19 young children and two teachers and another at a New York supermarket that left 10 people dead - helped spark the call for the protests.

Vases with flowers line the National Mall in Washington DC - each represents one of the 45,222 Americans who died from gun violence in 2020

But the problem of gun violence - which has killed more than 19,300 people so far this year in the US, according to the Gun Violence Archive - goes far beyond high-profile mass killings, with more than half of those deaths due to suicide.

"The will of the American people is being subverted by a minority," said Cynthia Martins, a 63-year-old resident of the US capital, referring to the Republican Party.

She carried a sign that used the party's "GOP" moniker to spell out "Guns Over People."

"There's a reason that we're still in this situation and there's still mass shootings," Ms Martins said, adding: "Hand wringing is not going to do anything - you have to make your voice heard."

The protests were organised by March for Our Lives, which was founded by survivors of a shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida, who held a rally that drew hundreds of thousands of people to the nation's capital in March 2018.

Protesters also turned out in New York City, with demonstrations planned at hundreds of locations around the country.

Demonstrators protest against gun violence at Brooklyn Bridge in New York

Ease of access to firearms, and mental health problems that can lead to them being used in attacks, have both been in the spotlight in the wake of the 24 May shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas.

The massacre was carried out by a gunman who bought two assault rifles shortly after turning 18.

Gun control advocates are calling for tighter restrictions or an outright ban on such rifles, one of which was also used in Buffalo.

But opponents of tougher regulations have sought to cast mass shootings as primarily a mental health issue, not a weapons problem.

The Democrat-controlled House of Representatives passed a broad package of proposals this week that included raising the purchasing age for most semi-automatic rifles from 18 to 21, but the party does not have the requisite 60 votes to advance it in the Senate.