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THERE IS NO HOME
OFFICE INTENTION TO BAN NEW SPECIFICATION DEACTIVATED FIREARMS!
"Home Secretary to ban deactivated
Firearms", the Headline used in the Home Office Press Release and picked-up by
all members of the media - IS NOT CORRECT.
The Home Office issued a Press
Release this morning to 'clarify' the "Home Secretary to ban deactivated
firearms". Below are excerpts from this Release. The full Press Release can be
found by going on the Home Office website and typing 'deactivated weapons' into
the Search box.
"Strict new controls on firearms
that have been deactivated could be introduced before the end of the year,"
The police estimate some 120,000 of
these deactivated firearms are in circulation. Although many are owned by
genuine responsible collectors, the police have raised concerns that many are
being used in crime. These figures relate almost entirely to weapons
deactivated before 1995 when tough new standards were introduced for the
deactivation of live weapons so they are far harder to reactivate.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith
said:
"Gun crime though thankfully
rare is a problem in some areas of the country. I want to balance protecting
the public with the rights of responsible collectors of deactivated firearms. I
will shortly consult on a way forward to allow genuine curators to collect
legitimate firearms while giving the police and other enforcement agencies the
powers they need to get black market firearms off our streets.
Tackling gun crime is key to
making people feel safer and more secure in their communities. We already have
the tightest controls in Europe but there is more we can do to remove the
threat of gun crime.
Before 1995 the standards for
deactivating guns were less stringent than those which currently apply. The
police tell me these pre-1995 weapons are turning up more and more in gun
related crime and I want to address these concerns to effectively eliminate the
threat from our streets.
The Home Office will shortly
consult on proposals to clamp down on the availability to criminals of firearms
deactivated prior to 1995. We will be looking at the implications for
responsible collectors including museums before legislating".
You will note from this,
although the word 'Ban' is used on the Headline the Home Secretary's main focus
of her concerns are on pre-1995 'old spec' deactivated weapons for which "there
will be exemptions for responsible collectors", which I understand may involve
an application for a Collector's Licence.
There is no question of a total ban
of all deac's and you will note in the Home Secretary's Statement that the UK
"has tough new standards after 1995" and "we have the tightest gun controls in
Europe"! |