New Straits Times

NZ TO START ARMED PATROLS AFTER CHRISTCHUR­CH SHOOTING

Armed Response Team to be deployed in 3 areas on six-month trial

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NEW Zealand officials yesterday said armed police will patrol parts of the country in a trial project following heightened security concerns after a mass shooting in Christchur­ch in March that killed 51 people.

New Zealand, like the United Kingdom and Norway, is one of the few countries where police do not carry guns while on general duty.

However, hand guns, rifles and tasers are kept in their vehicles and can be used with a supervisor’s permission.

Serious crime is relatively unusual in New Zealand, although frontline police were armed for several weeks following the massacre by a suspected white supremacis­t at two mosques in Christchur­ch on March 15.

The attack sparked a debate on whether all police should carry fire arms.

“Following the events of March 15 in Christchur­ch, our operating environmen­t has changed,” Police Commission­er Mike Bush said yesterday.

“Police must ensure our people are equipped and enabled to perform their roles safely and to ensure our communitie­s are, and feel, safe.

“This means having the right people with the right tools, skills and knowledge ready to respond at all times.”

The Armed Response Teams will be rolled out in Manukau county in Auckland, New Zealand’s largest city, and Waikato and Canterbury on Oct 28 on a six-month trial.

They will be routinely armed, equipped, mobile and ready to support frontline police officers at incidents that require enhanced tactical capabiliti­es, Bush said.

He said there was no immediate threat.

Australian national Brenton Tarrant had been charged over the attack in Christchur­ch, New Zealand’s worst peace-time shooting. Tarrant had pleaded not guilty to 92 charges against him and faces trial in May.

Threat levels had been heightened around the country since the Christchur­ch attack and 1,400 firearms have been seized from offenders since March.

Police Minister Stuart Nash said the move did not mean that police would be armed routinely.

“The three areas have been selected for the trial because of the incidence of crimes involving armed offenders,” Nash said.

“Police turn up to some callouts with no knowledge of what they are walking into. Every month police turn up to 200 incidents where a firearm is involved.”

New Zealanders must have a gun licence to own a firearm. There are an estimated 1.5 million guns in the country.

The government banned military-style semi-automatic and other high-calibre guns within weeks of the Christchur­ch shooting and also introduced a gun amnesty scheme. More than 29,000 firearms have been collected so far, according to statistics provided on the police website.

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