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    Home»Top Countries»Canada»Rates of gun-related intimate partner violence rising: StatsCan
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    Rates of gun-related intimate partner violence rising: StatsCan

    News DeskBy News DeskJuly 10, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Rates of gun-related intimate partner violence rising: StatsCan
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    The average annual rate of intimate partner violence involving a firearm between 2020 and 2024 was significantly higher than the rate a decade prior, according to new research released by Statistics Canada Wednesday.

    The average annual rate of these offences was 58 per cent higher between 2020 and 2024 than 2010 to 2014. The majority of victims – 85 per cent – were women and girls aged 12 and over.

    Most intimate partner violence crimes don’t involve firearms, but those that do are five times more likely to be lethal than incidents that don’t involve firearms, according to Public Safety Canada.

    The most dangerous time is during or immediately after a separation, said Angela Marie MacDougall, executive director of Battered Women’s Support Services in Vancouver.

    “When somebody is leaving an abusive relationship and a firearm is present, we consider that high risk for potential lethality and that it means a different kind of … safety planning and risk assessment that needs to be factored in.”

    A Black woman with red braids sits in front of a bookcase.
    Angela Marie MacDougall, executive director of Vancouver’s Battered Women’s Support Services, says it’s important for survivors of intimate partner violence to know they can apply to have their abuser’s firearms taken away. (CBC)

    Shooting was the cause of death for one in five victims of intimate partner homicides between 2009 and 2024, the second most common cause of death after stabbing, the report found. 

    Increase among young, unmarried victims

    Rates of intimate partner violence involving a firearm were highest among victims between 18 and 24, the report found.

    And while incidents between current spouses were most commonly reported, the report found this declined over the years, while incidents between dating partners have increased.

    “I think people maybe are expecting that violence is happening within a particular demographic of people that are married, that are living in a house, that have children, which definitely happens,” MacDougall said.

    But she added that in B.C., just under half (44 per cent) of girls and women aged 15 and over will experience intimate partner violence.

    “So these are huge numbers, but unfortunately, we’re not looking at youth in the same way that maybe we’re thinking about adults. And youth violence has its own considerations. There’s no policies and certainly no funding that’s going toward addressing those gaps in prevention around public awareness and or in service provision that is for girls that are under the age of majority.”

    More common in rural areas

    The report found rates of intimate partner violence with firearms were nearly three times higher outside cities between 2020 and 2024. The only exception was Regina, which had a higher rate than rural areas. 

    The Regina Police Service did not respond to a request for comment by deadline.

    Among provinces, rates were highest in the territories and the Prairies.

    The report also found handguns have recently overtaken rifles or shotguns as the type of weapon most commonly used.

    Majority of accused had prior contact with police

    Two-thirds of the 923 people accused in incidents involving firearm-related intimate partner violence in 2024 had been accused of a criminal offence in the previous six years, the report found.

    Just over a third (36 per cent) had previously been accused of intimate partner violence, though the report notes these crimes often go underreported to police.

    In cases that resulted in the victim’s death, there was a history of violence that was known to police in 44 per cent of shootings and 60 per cent of intimate partner homicides committed through other means.

    ‘Red flag’ laws

    In 2023, the federal government amended firearms laws to allow people who believe they are in danger to apply for an emergency prohibition order, which can be issued by a judge. 

    If granted, someone’s firearms, licence or other ownership documents can be removed for up to 30 days, or possibly longer, after a court hearing. 

    MacDougall says it’s important for survivors, especially if they’re planning on leaving an abusive relationship, to know they can request that someone’s firearms be confiscated. 

    But she also noted that edged weapons, such as knives, pose the greatest risk for lethal violence in these cases. 

    Another form of protection the law provides for is the automatic revocation of a firearms licence when someone is under a protection order, said Suzanne Zaccour, director of legal affairs for the National Association of Women and the Law. This would be helpful because the onus would not be on the victim to apply for it, she added.

    However, the government has not brought in the necessary regulations to enforce this, Zaccour says, something her organization has been lobbying to change.

    Seven per cent of those shot in intimate part homicides were under protection orders when they died, as were 14 per cent of victims who died by other means, the report says.

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