Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

UK amends bill to allow Sikhs to carry kirpan

- Press Trust of India

OFFENSIVE WEAPONS BILL COMPLETED ITS READINGS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS AND HAS NOW MOVED TO HOUSE OF LORDS FOR NOD

LONDON:THE UK government has confirmed an amendment to a new weapons bill going through Parliament to ensure that it would not impact the right of the British Sikh community to possess and supply kirpans, or religious swords.

The Offensive Weapons Bill, 2018, completed its various readings in the House of Commons this week and has now moved to the House of Lords for approval.

It involves a new offence of possessing certain offensive weapons in public and places new restrictio­ns on the online sales of bladed articles and corrosive products in attempt to crackdown on rising knife and acid-related attacks in the country.

“We have engaged closely with the Sikh community on the issue of kirpans. As a result, we have amended the Bill to ensure that the possession and supply of large kirpans for religious reasons can continue,” a UK Home office spokespers­on said on Thursday.

The All Party Parliament­ary Group (APPG) for British Sikhs led a delegation to the UK home office in recent weeks to ensure that the kirpan, a Sikh article of faith, remains exempt when the new bill becomes a law.

“I am pleased to see the government amendment and look forward to seeing an accompanyi­ng set of documentat­ion, which reflects the importance of not criminalis­ing the Sikh community for the sale or possession of large kirpans,” said Labour MP Preet Kaur Gill, chair of the APPG for British Sikhs.

Gill, the first woman Sikh MP in the House of Commons, was accompanie­d by APPG vicechairs Pat Mcfadden and Dominic Grieve at a meeting with UK home secretary Sajid Javid and home office minister Victoria Atkins to discuss changes to the Offensive Weapons Bill, which would maintain status quo in continuing to legally safeguard the sale, possession and use of large kirpans.

Her fellow Sikh MP, Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi, also made an interventi­on during the Offensive Weapons Bill debate in the Commons to seek “assurances about the kirpan, given the Sikh community’s serious concerns”.

Large kirpans, with blades over 50cm, are used by the community during religious ceremonies. They would have fallen foul of the new bill on the possession of large blades without the amendment, which has now been agreed.

The Offensive Weapons Bill, 2018, is aimed at strengthen­ing existing legislativ­e measures on offensive weapons, focusing on corrosive substances, knives and certain types of firearm. The Bill will give new laws to ban the sale of corrosive substances to anyone under 18, to target people carrying acid, to make it more difficult for anyone under the age of 18 to buy knives online.

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