The New Zealand Herald

‘Trace our hidden arsenal’

Police Associatio­n head wants accurate firearms registry on military-style weapons

- Nicole Barratt

The Police Associatio­n says Kiwis should be asking why 7000 New Zealanders need nearly 14,000 military style semi-automatic weapons between them.

The associatio­n’s president, Chris Cahill, addressed a firearms and public health seminar yesterday run by the University of Otago.

He advocated an up-to-date firearm registry to prioritise public safety.

Cahill said surely a small country that registered its cars, boats, dogs, births, deaths and marriages could cooperate on accounting for lethal weapons — who has them, who has on-sold them, and who has lost them or had them stolen.

“These weapons would be far more traceable than is the case now, and we would gradually build a more definitive picture of New Zealand’s hidden arsenal.”

He said his point in pushing for a registry was to build it gradually and without onus on legitimate firearms owners by extending the “permits to procure” process, and during licence renewals and safety storage inspection­s recording serial numbers of all firearms present.

Cahill noted firearm violence was an everyday issue in policing.

In their 2017 members’ survey, one in eight officers reported being threatened by a firearm once or more in the past year, a 38 per cent increase on the 2015 survey results.

On the front line the figure jumps to 21 per cent threatened at least once in the past year.

“Being threatened with a gun should not be part of a police officer’s job, but unfortunat­ely it is increasing­ly so, on the front line in particular.”

Cahill said the reality for communitie­s and police defied those who wrote off gun violence as “merely a phenomena restricted to gangs”.

He referred to a Wellington taxidriver shot in a late-night debacle over a fare, Department of Conservati­on workers who were shot at while working, and numerous dairy owners forced at gunpoint to empty their tills.

He clarified the associatio­n’s beef was not with most legitimate licensed firearms owners. “It is with the firearms threats our members face during routine policing because criminals have easy access to firearms.

“We also question why so many firearms are imported every year.”

Customs figures, revealed under the Official Informatio­n Act (OIA), show between 50,000 and 55,000 firearms are legally imported into New Zealand each year.

Cahill said that was more than half a million guns in the past 10 years including high-powered hunting rifles, shotguns, pistols, semiautoma­tics and restricted air guns.

The potential risks associated with some firearms were, to a degree, improved through the endorsemen­t system, but the numbers in these categories were still large, he added.

According to some licensed dealers, the private firearms-sales business is thriving and often lands a better price for the seller, Cahill said.

“Under the current legislatio­n I can obtain a firearms licence and buy 100, 200 or whatever number of firearms I desire and there is no record of the size of my cache, just a record of my licence-to-own.”

He used a member of the Head Hunters who legally amassed $30,000 of high-powered and semiautoma­tic rifles over three years as an example.

In a response to an OIA request on the accuracy of firearms recording in the National Intelligen­ce Applicatio­n computer system, police revealed:

There is little knowledge of the requiremen­t to record seized or surrendere­d firearms;

Many firearms officers claimed they didn’t know about the national recording standards;

Multiple paper records and recording systems lead to inconsiste­ncies, inaccuraci­es and make it difficult to collate accurate statistics.

Cahill said the “unacceptab­le level of inaccuracy” was concerning.

Police Minister Stuart Nash said he could not comment without seeing the speech.

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