Sowetan

Gun Free SA welcomes Cele’s firearm amnesty

- By Ernest Mabuza

SA’s experience of firearm amnesties confirmed they were effective in recovering guns‚ including unwanted‚ unauthoris­ed and illegal weapons‚ Gun Free SA said yesterday.

The organisati­on welcomed the declaratio­n by police minister Bheki Cele on Wednesday of a six-month national firearm amnesty‚ starting on December 1.

Previous rounds had seen the recovery of more than 120‚000 firearms and 1,8-million rounds of ammunition.

“Over one third of the guns [45‚133] and ammunition [738‚028] recovered in the 2005 and 2010 amnesties were illegally held‚” the organisati­on said.

It said the impending amnesty was being implemente­d within the context of a national gun violence “emergency”.

The latest crime statistics showed guns to be the leading cause of murder (47% of murders in 2018/19 were from gunshots).

In Gauteng‚ gunshots had overtaken motor vehicle collisions as the leading cause of death in the province.

“If the 2019/20 amnesty is undertaken as part of a comprehens­ive strategy aimed at recovering and destroying the existing pool of firearms and limiting the flow of new firearms into communitie­s‚ it holds the potential to begin reversing SA’s gun violence crisis‚” said Gun Free SA director Adele Kirsten.

Gun Free said a concern around the latest amnesty was whether police had systems in place to ensure that guns and ammunition handed in were permanentl­y removed from communitie­s.

This was based on various incidents in which weapons handed in for destructio­n in the past had leaked from police stores back to the streets.

Kirsten said the safeguardi­ng of guns and ammunition from the point of hand-in through the chain of storage and transport until the moment of destructio­n was paramount.

“To verify the effectiven­ess of these systems‚ it is absolutely critical that an official independen­t observer with monitors in all provinces is appointed to ensure oversight and transparen­cy and to identify problems as soon as possible so that these can quickly be dealt with‚” she said.

The amnesty allows people with illegal guns or whose licences had expired to turn them in without facing prosecutio­n. Cele said ballistics tests would be conducted on all surrendere­d firearms to check if they were used in a crime.

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