HC Deb 18 January 1996 vol 269 cc714-5W
Mr. Worthington

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland on what grounds a gun licence may be refused. [8689]

Sir John Wheeler

Under the Firearms (Northern Ireland) Order 1981, a firearm certificate shall not be granted unless the Chief Constable is satisfied that:

  • the firearm could be held without danger to public safety or to the peace; or
  • the applicant is fitted to hold a firearm; or
  • the applicant has 'good reason' for the firearm; or
  • the applicant is not prohibited from holding a firearm by virtue of article 22 of the order;

Mr. Worthington

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many applications for gun licences have been made in each of the last five years; and how many have been refused and for what reasons. [8644]

Sir John Wheeler

Applications for firearm certificates in the last five years are as follows:

Applications Refusals
1991 2,857 343
1992 2,975 561
1993 3,496 474
1994 3,799 615
1995 (to 30 November) 2,985 510

Firearm certificates are refused in accordance with the criteria specified in article 28 of the Firearms (NI) Order 1981. A breakdown to show the reason for each refusal would incur disproportionate cost.

Mr. Worthington

To ask the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland how many gun licences are currently in existence; for how many guns; and what is the breakdown(a) of these weapons by (i) type and (ii) declared purpose and (b) of the licence holders by (1) background and (2) location. [8643]

Sir John Wheeler

At 30 November 1995 there were 88,092 firearm certificates in Northern Ireland on which 133,869 weapons were held.

Number
Shotguns 85,204
Pistols and revolvers 13,044
Rifles 13,777
Air weapons 21,004
Miscellaneous1 840
1Includes humane killers, signal pistols, starting pistols, collectors items and spear guns.

Information regarding the declared purposes for which the firearms were sought and the background and location of certificate holders, is not held separately and could be obtained only at disproportionate cost.

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