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Only 530 semi-automatic weapons handed in to Police, figures reveal

Author
Newstalk ZB ,
Publish Date
Tue, 28 May 2019, 5:29PM
Semi-automatic weapons were banned by the Government in March. (Photo / Getty)

Only 530 semi-automatic weapons handed in to Police, figures reveal

Author
Newstalk ZB ,
Publish Date
Tue, 28 May 2019, 5:29PM

New figures show gun owners are holding back on handing in their guns, because they're waiting to hear how much the government will pay for them

Figures released to Newstalk ZB by the New Zealand Police show that, as of Sunday night, only 530 guns had been handed in since the ban on semi-automatic guns was finalised in early April.  

There are around 250,000 licences firearm holders in New Zealand and it's estimated as many as 300,000 guns could now be illegal.

It comes as gun owners are still waiting on any details around compensation for their guns.

Police Minister Stuart Nash said in April that regulations, including a price list, would be considered by cabinet by the end of May.

Nicole McKee, Secretary of the Council of Licensed Firearm Owners, told Heather du Plessis-Allan that there has not been any communication from Government about prices for the buyback.

"If they are being serious about their considerations and ensuring that there is fair and reasonable compensation, than firearm owners will wait a bit longer to make sure it is just and it is fair when it is received." 

She says that people are also likely to still be considering if they will claim their firearms as heirlooms or will sell them to collectors. 

McKee expects that most people will comply with the laws, but she says that there is no trust in the system whatsoever amongst firearms owners, and that people feel blindsided and blamed. 

"We are effectively being punished for the acts of a foreign terrorist, and we want to make sure that our personal and private property is adequately compensated when it is confiscated." 

The semi-automatic weapon ban was instituted after 51 people were killed in a mass shooting at two mosques in Christchurch.

Semi-automatic weapons were banned within a week of the attack, with legislation rushed through Parliament and passed within a month. At the time, the Government said they aimed to purchase all firearms back by September 30th, but McKee does not believe that will happen.

She does not believe that the Government will purchase all of the guns back by September 30. 

"There has to be costing around how they will implement the system as well," she says, with factors such as how they will destroy the firearms as well. 

McKee says that firearms owners are looking for compensation for parts as well as the weapons themselves. 

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