PODGORICA, Montenegro — A top-level meeting in Montenegro on Friday promised tough measures to curb illegal weapons after a gunman fatally shot 12 people in a second such tragedy in less than three years in the small Balkan country.
An emergency session of Montenegro's National Security Council announced a new, strict gun law and urgent actions to confiscate what are believed to be abundant illegal weapons in possession of Montenegro's 620,000 citizens.
Prime Minister Milojko Spajić said that holders of registered guns will undergo new security and psychological checks while ''draconian'' punishment is planned for those who hold weapons illegally.
''There will be no mercy for these people,'' Spajić said at a news conference after the council session. ''They will end up in prison.''
Spajić specified that authorities would give people a period of two months to surrender illegal weapons without facing any consequences. After that, he said, ''the law will be explicit and even minimal sentences handed by judges will be drastic.''
The Adriatic Sea nation has a deeply-rooted gun culture. State television broadcaster RTCG reported that Montenegro is sixth in the world when it comes to the number of illegal weapons per capita.
The gunman who killed a dozen people in a shooting rampage in the western town of Cetinje on Wednesday did so with an illegal 9 mm gun. Police have said they found 37 casings at the shooting locations, and more than 80 additional pieces of ammunition in the gunman's possession.
The 45-year-old man, identified as Aco Martinović, eventually shot himself in the head and died shortly after. He is believed to have snapped after a bar brawl, and went home to get his weapon before launching a bloody rampage at several locations late Wednesday afternoon.