Gun amnesty call in light of new figures
A DUNEDIN arms control advocate is calling for a gun amnesty, as new figures reveal the South has among the highest rates of militarystyle semiautomatic weapon ownership in the country.
But the owner of a New Zealand gun store chain says the University of Otago professor is scaremongering, and the weapons, which can feature unlimited magazine sizes and require a special licence endorsement, are used largely by responsible pest controllers and sports shooters.
At least 1365 firearms licence holders are endorsed for militarystyle semiautomatics (MSSAs) in Otago and Southland, the equivalent of 41 per 10,000 people, according to figures released by police under the Official Information Act.
Only Tasman (42 per 10,000 people) and Northland (43 per 10,000 people) have higher proportions of MSSA owners. The figure is 23 per 10,000 people for both Auckland and Wellington.
The figures also show 3205 licenceholders in the Southern district (Otago and Southland) hold the endorsement required to own target pistols, along with 767 people endorsed to own ‘‘restricted weapons’’, including machineguns, grenades and rocket launchers.
However, the Arms Act requires restricted weapons to be stored in an inoperable condition and never used with live ammunition — they are generally the domain of collectors, moviemakers and reenactors.
University of Otago National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies chairman Prof Kevin Cle ments said he was astonished and concerned at the rate of ownership of MSSAs in the South, along with the numbers of pistols and restricted weapons.
In his view, MSSAs such as AR15 rifles were not required for hunting or farm work, and he feared they and target pistols could fall into the hands of criminals.
‘‘They’re clearly highly desirable for criminal activity . . . and they’re highly lethal for anyone that has a psychotic break and wants to shoot large numbers of people.’’
He was concerned about the possibility of bump stocks being added to MSSAs, turning them into fully automatic weapons. Bump stocks began figuring prominently in the gun control debate after they were used by Stephen Paddock, who shot dead 59 people at a music festival in Las Vegas in 2017.
A special permit is required to import the accessory into New Zealand, but police have rejected at least two attempts to import bump stocks in recent years, and they do not appear to be available for sale in the country at present.
Prof Clements called for New Zealand to follow the lead of Australia, where the Government ran a national firearms amnesty in 2017 after the siege in Sydney’s Martin Pl and the shooting of a police civilian amid concerns over the growing number of unregistered guns.
He believed every weapon in New Zealand should be registered to its owner, Prof Clements said.
Acting Superintendent Mike McIlraith said there were 66,085 MSSAs, pistols and restricted weapons linked to active firearms licence holders nationally.
Gun City owner David Tipple, of Christchurch, said it was unsurprising the South had a relatively high rate of ownership of MSSAs given the use of largecapacity 30shot magazines for pest control, especially by shooters operating from helicopters.
‘‘It was always intended in the legislation that we’d be protecting our national parks by the ability to control pests with a largercapacity magazine.’’
His chain of gun stores sells AR15style rifles, which have been used in several mass shootings in the United States, but he believed they had been unfairly vilified.
‘‘Is an AR15 evil because you dislike the look of it? Do mag wheels make a driver more likely to break the law?’’
Mr Tipple said bump stocks were technically legal, but unavailable in New Zealand as police would not grant import permits.
However, the reduction in accuracy from firing a rifle in automatic mode meant there was no demand for bump stocks, he said.
‘‘Nobody wants it . . . We’re actually safer if everybody fits a bump stock, because they ain’t going to hit us.’’