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By Nick Carey

Jan 19 (Reuters) – Pro-gun activists plan rallies in 49

states at “high noon” on Saturday to support the right to own

firearms they say is under attack from President Barack Obama’s

proposals to reduce gun violence.

The rallies, to be held mostly at state capitals, were being

organized by a group called Guns Across America that was

launched by Texas airline pilot Eric Reed.

The U.S. debate over gun control flared in mid-December when

a man killed 20 first graders and six adults in a matter of

minutes at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut, using

an assault rifle.

In the wake of the mass killing, Obama and gun control

advocates have begun a push to ban assault weapons. A number of

other states have taken up gun legislation and New York, which

had among the strictest gun control laws in the country,

broadened its ban on assault weapons on Tuesday.

Obama also called for a ban on high-capacity magazines and

more stringent background checks for gun purchasers.

Gun control advocates say American civilians have no

justifiable need for assault weapons or high-capacity magazines,

and they say more background checks will help keep guns out of

the hands of criminals.

The reaction has been fierce from gun supporters such as the

National Rifle Association, who have long argued that their

right to bear arms is enshrined in the Second Amendment to the

U.S. Constitution.

Reed, 38, has said after he heard Obama talk about gun

control on the day of the Sandy Hook massacre in December that

he thought gun owners should send a strong message to lawmakers

in Washington.

As of Friday afternoon, the Facebook page for Guns Across

America listed more than 18,000 people who say they plan to

attend events, and Reed said Alaska was the only state with no

organizer for a rally.

Meanwhile, gun-control advocates on Sunday plan to hold a

National Gun Prevention Sabbath, where they say 150 houses of

worship will call on the faithful to advocate for an “actionable

plan to prevent gun violence.” People who have lost loved ones

to gun violence will display their photographs, organizers said.

(Reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Edith Honan and Vicki

Allen)