Business World

Australia amnesty takes 57,000 guns off the streets

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SYDNEY — More than 57,000 illegal firearms, many of them automatic or semi-automatic weapons, have been handed in under an Australian amnesty that authoritie­s Thursday said had made the country safer.

A final count from the threemonth campaign to remove weapons from the streets came with debate over gun reform rampant in the United States after a mass school shooting in Florida.

Australia’s strict gun laws, enacted after a 1996 mass shooting that killed 35 people, are often held up by safety activists as a model for the US to follow. The country has had no mass shootings since.

The first national amnesty since Martin Bryant went on the rampage armed with semiautoma­tic weapons at the historic Tasmanian colonial convict site of Port Arthur 22 years ago netted 57,324 firearms.

Running from July 1 to September 30 last year, almost 2,500 of them were fully automatic and semi-automatic.

Law Enforcemen­t Minister Angus Taylor said it was a great example of what could be achieved “when government­s and the Australian public work together to make our communitie­s safer.”

“Taking these unregister­ed firearms off the streets means they will not fall into the hands of criminals, who might use them to endanger the lives of innocent Australian­s,” he said.

“The government is committed to removing illegal firearms from our community and tackling gun-related crime.

“The next step of our ambitious agenda is passing our legislatio­n that cracks down on gun traffickin­g.”

Among more unusual items handed in was a sten machine gun, best known for their use by British forces during World War II, and a small French Garter gun.

A rocket launcher, which the owner said was found at a local tip, was also handed over.

Ahead of the amnesty, which was prompted by fears of terrorism and an influx of illegal guns that saw a spate of gangland shootings, the government said it believed there were as many as 260,000 illicit weapons on the streets.

People were allowed to hand in unregister­ed or unwanted firearms with no questions asked. Outside this, they face fines of up to Aus$ 280,000 ($ 212,000) or 14 years in jail for illegal gun possession.

All guns in Australia must be registered, although many arrive illegally from overseas through organized syndicates. — AFP

 ??  ?? FILE: Detective Chief Inspector Wayne Hoffman of the New South Wales Police speaks to media, as guns previously seized from criminals are seen behind him.
FILE: Detective Chief Inspector Wayne Hoffman of the New South Wales Police speaks to media, as guns previously seized from criminals are seen behind him.

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