Swords will be outlawed from July under new laws to curb the growing use of the weapons in street brawls.
Police Minister Andre Haermeyer said the ban would help police overcome a culture of young people arming themselves with swords. “For most people running around the street carrying swords there is absolutely no reason for them to be carrying those weapons,” he said yesterday.
From July, anyone found possessing or selling a sword without a permit will face up to six months’ jail and fines of up to $12,000.
Existing sword owners must surrender their weapons to police, sell them to a licensed dealer or apply to the Chief Commissioner for specific approval.
Collectors and people with legitimate cultural, religious or military reasons to own swords will be exempted from the ban, but must store them under lock and key and have a burglar alarm.
The sword ban follows a string of recent attacks and a regulatory impact statement undertaken by the State Government last year.
Last week, a 13-year-old boy was arrested and charged after allegedly charging police with a sword near Castlemaine, in central Victoria.
A 21-year-old man had his hand severed by a samurai sword in a confrontation between 40 men in the Fitzroy Gardens a fortnight ago — the second brawl involving swords in 24 hours.
Huy Huynh, 19, was chased from the Salt nightclub and hacked to death nearby in July 2002 by a mob using samurai swords and machetes. . . .
The Government is also looking at bans on some other weapons, such as crossbows . . . .
I realize that some people might think this sort of restriction is just fine — my point here is simply that restrictions often do lead to broader ones (for reasons I canvassed here). And when people object to even a seemingly assault weapons ban, their slippery slope concerns may be quite sensible.
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