Mercury (Hobart)

Bid for tighter gun control

- JAMES KITTO

themercury.com.au

CALLS have emerged to further tighten gun storage requiremen­ts after Tasmania recorded the highest rate of firearms thefts of any state.

But the push for stricter firearms regulation­s by Gun Control Australia has been slammed by the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers party, who said responsibi­lity rested with offenders.

A new report by the Australian Institute of Criminolog­y, which showed 847 incidents of

SUBSCRIPTI­ONS 1300 696 397 reported firearm theft happened Australia-wide in 2018, found Tasmania more than doubled the national theft rate.

Nationally there were 3.4 firearms incidents per 100,000 population in 2018, while Tasmania saw 8.1 per 100,000.

The spike in incidents comes after the State Government in 2017 made changes to tighten storage requiremen­ts for firearms owners.

But Tasmanian lawyer and Gun Control Australia vice president Roland Browne said more needed to be done.

“What needs to happen at a state and national level is a further tightening of storage requiremen­ts, as we’ve been calling for, such as electronic security for all firearms in homes,” he said.

In pointing to the firearms report, Mr Browne said gun thefts occurred mostly in rural Australian areas compared to metropolit­an locations — evidence, he said, which could suggest why Tasmania recorded a high theft rate.

Shooters Fishers and Farmers Tasmania chair and former police officer Wayne Turale said Tasmania had stringent firearms guidelines in place and said focus should be put on offenders who targeted guns.

“The way it is at the moment, is if you steal firearms, your conviction is recorded as burglary or stealing, with the stolen items not recorded,” he said. “You could’ve been stealing tools out of the shed or items out of a car — it gives no specific tracking of offenders.

“What we would like to see is separate offences for people who actively target firearms, so the court sees who they are.”

Tasmania Police’s latest Corporate Performanc­e Report shows there were 57 incidents of firearms thefts in the first three months of 2020 — up from 36 incidents over the same period a year prior.

Tasmania Police Acting Assistant Commission­er Specialist Support Ian Whish-Wilson said the police force was “proactive” in dealing with all firearm-related crime, with offences involving firearms a priority. offenders for

“Any illicit firearm is a concern to Tasmania Police,” he said. “We take every opportunit­y to take illegal firearms off our streets by having a permanent firearms amnesty, carrying out random firearms storage inspection­s, and investigat­ing diligently when firearms incidents or thefts occur.”

Police, Fire and Emergency Management Minister Mark Shelton said Tasmania’s firearms laws were among the toughest in the world, and it was the only state with a permanent firearms amnesty.

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