The Star Malaysia

Baltimore buys back nearly 2,000 weapons

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WASHINGTON: Baltimore police have collected nearly 2,000 weapons, including a rocket launcher, as part of a buy-back programme aimed at reducing violence in the US city.

The three-day operation last week was announced in a bid to rid the streets of illegal weapons in a city where the number of homicides has surpassed 300 for the fourth year in a row.

Officers collected 1,860 weapons, a police spokesman said. The city’s mayor tweeted that a rocket launcher was among the haul.

Authoritie­s offered US$25 (RM104) for large magazines, US$100 (RM417) for handguns and rifles, US$200 (RM835) for semi-automatic rifles and US$500 (RM2,090) for automatic rifles, promised anonymity to those who took part in the amnesty.

Home to 600,000 people, Baltimore allocated US$250,000 (RM1.04mil) for the operation, according to the city council – as the Baltimore Sun’s editorial board said the programme was “likely to be a large waste of time, money and resources”.

The daily newspaper said such buy-back schemes “do little to reduce the number of shootings or to get guns out of the hands of criminals intent on settling a score, defending their drug territory or protecting themselves from rival gangs and retaliator­y shootings”.

But police chief Gary Guttle told the Sun that if guns are “not in existence, they’re not in the home, they can’t be used, they can’t be stolen”. “They won’t contribute to our vio- lence,” he said.

The right to bear arms is guaranteed by the 2nd Amendment to the US Constituti­on, and there are weapons in one third of American homes.

According to health authoritie­s, nearly 40,000 people died in the United States as a result of firearms in 2017, a figure that includes suicides.

 ?? — AFP ?? Here be guns: Baltimore policemen speaking with a man as he arrives at the Shake and Bake Community Center in Baltimore for the gun buy-back programme.
— AFP Here be guns: Baltimore policemen speaking with a man as he arrives at the Shake and Bake Community Center in Baltimore for the gun buy-back programme.

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