Cape Argus

Amnesty period extended for expired gun licences

Owners urged to hand in any illegal weapons and ammunition before January 31

- SISONKE MLAMLA sisonke.mlamla@inl.co.za

OWNERS of illegal firearms and ammunition now have a second chance to hand them in at the nearest police station.

The new firearm amnesty period has been extended to January 31, and owners have been urged to take advantage of the period by handing in their firearms and ammunition either for destructio­n or renewal of a competency certificat­e and a valid licence.

Police spokespers­on Brenda Muridili said that the previous amnesty period – December to May – was thwarted by the unexpected Covid19 pandemic. Despite that, police received 46714 firearms, she said.

Confederat­ion of Hunting Associatio­ns of South Africa (Chasa) chief executive Stephen Palos said it was compulsory to hand in the firearm/s and that the applicatio­n is for a “new” licence on the SAPS 271 form, and not the renewal form.

“Should your competency require renewal too, there is specific provision that this can be done simultaneo­usly as a result of the settlement of a court action brought earlier this year by NatShoot, and supported by Chasa and others,” Palos said.

Activist Colin Bosman said when looking at the number of expired gun licences and with estimates that there could be as many as 500000 it meant close to half a million law-abiding gun owners neglected for whatever reason to renew their licences on time.

Bosman said on the balance of probabilit­y most owners simply forgot. “Existing legislatio­n allows no avenue for renewing expired licences without handing these weapons in for ballistic testing and destructio­n or ballistic testing and reapplicat­ion for a new licence from scratch in order to reclaim that firearm back from within a system that the police themselves have conceded is in a shambles.”

He said the authoritie­s claimed more than 45000 guns were handed in for destructio­n during the last amnesty. “It’s to be assumed that they were ballistica­lly tested for crimes committed prior to destructio­n. The question was, how many of these handed-in guns were involved in a crime? The answer would be none.”

He said authoritie­s were very quiet on that point, “not a peep out of them on a single positive test. The reason is that criminals don’t hand guns in, they simply recycle them.”

Gun Free SA researcher Claire Taylor called on Police Minister Bheki

Cele and the National Police Commission­er to urgently strengthen actions to recover and destroy unwanted, obsolete and illegally held guns as soon as possible, including holding a national firearms amnesty and vigorously undertakin­g crime-intelligen­ce operations.

Taylor said they should also review and upgrade weapons storage and destructio­n facilities to prevent loss and theft.

 ?? RITCHIE African News Agency (ANA) ?? | DAVID
THE new firearm amnesty period has been extended to January 31 and owners have been urged to take advantage of the period.
RITCHIE African News Agency (ANA) | DAVID THE new firearm amnesty period has been extended to January 31 and owners have been urged to take advantage of the period.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa