Unanimous backing for illegal firearms inquiry

There will be an inquiry into illegal firearms in New Zealand after unanimous backing from Parliament's law and order committee.

The committee met this afternoon and made the decision to hold the inquiry, Labour's police spokesman Stuart Nash confirmed.

"We had unanimous support from every single party in the select committee. We think the way forward is actually to work together on this, because there is no politics in police safety."

That decision has been welcomed by the Police Association, whose president Greg O'Connor said police officers had been expressing concerns about the number of criminals in possession of firearms.

"Last week's events where four officers were shot, a cache of military-style semi-automatic firearms was seized, two people were murdered by firearms, and a cache of guns was located in Hawkes Bay are evidence of the extent of the problem," he said.

"This inquiry needs to focus on whether it is faulty regulations or inadequate policing, or a combination of both, which is at the heart of the problem."

Committee chair and National MP Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi said the inquiry's draft terms of reference had been agreed, which were essentially to examine how gangs and criminals were getting their hands on illegal firearms.

"There is a big problem right now. And we hope to nail it down," he said.

Green Party criminal justice spokesman David Clendon said he was pleased all parties had supported the inquiry.

"This is not just about gangs. Certainly they are part of the problem ... but many of the major gun-related tragedies in New Zealand have had nothing to do with gangs ... we really need to get control of the availability of firearms.

"It's not a crisis, but certainly it is an urgent problem."

NZ First law and order spokesman Ron Mark, who has previously said an inquiry would be a kneejerk political response, said it was agreed that the inquiry would look at issues relating to the illegal possession of firearms in New Zealand.

"That is quite tight, and New Zealand First is very comfortable with that. We have gone through firearms reviews ... time and time and time again in New Zealand. And I think the issue that has popped up here are how are these weapons, and particularly military-style weapons, ending up in the hands of organised crime."

Mr Mark said it was clear that after the Christchurch earthquakes Australian gangs had increasing influence in New Zealand, and that had changed the culture of the criminal underworld.

Last week, Police Minister Judith Collins said she wanted to see a select committee inquiry into the availability of firearms, after the shooting of four police officers near Kawerau and the discovery of a cache of guns was found stashed in the ceiling of a South Auckland house, including 14 military-style guns, among them AK47s and M16s.

- nicholas.jones@nzherald.co.nz

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