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Police call for ban on fireworks

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Published Date:
22 April 2007
POLICE in Scotland are demanding a complete ban on the sale of fireworks to the public. The call will be made on Tuesday during the first day of the Scottish Police Federation's annual conference.
It comes after a near 20% rise in the number of injuries sustained from fireworks last year. But despite politicians and other senior police officers throughout the UK making similar pleas, there is likely to be resistance to the plan.

Some criti
cs fear that any prohibition would lead to firework production being pushed underground with 'kitchen sink chemists' making their own.

Tuesday's move will be formally put forward by the Strathclyde Joint Branch when the organisation meets for the two-day seminar in Peebles.

In 2006, 94 people in Scotland were injured by fireworks during a 33-day period starting on October 11 - an increase of 27 on the number of victims in 2005.

Of those hurt, 78% were injured on the street while more than half of the total were aged under 16.

This was despite the Scottish Executive's introduction of new laws in 2004 to prevent the sale of fireworks to schoolchildren. There has been cross-party support for a clampdown on fireworks with Labour's Cathy Peattie, the Tories' Jamie McGrigor and Shona Robison from the SNP all in the past calling for a toughening up of the firework laws.

However, Scotland's rank-and-file policemen believe the current legislation does not go far enough and are now demanding a complete ban.

But a spokesman for the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents cast doubt on the wisdom of the idea.

He said: "Fireworks are a traditional form of entertainment and we are not of the opinion that banning them will help. This would open the door to illegal fireworks being imported and sold on the black market or over the internet."



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  • Last Updated: 21 April 2007 8:09 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Fireworks
 
1

Guga,

Rockall 22/04/2007 06:49:15

What is it with some people? They want to ban everything. How about banning pushbikes? How many people are injured on pushbikes? How about banning electricity. 100% of the people that use electricity die.

More to the point, how about banning policemen from talking garbage?

2

Rab McClair,

HIGH HORSE 22/04/2007 09:48:02

.............and no' before time !!!!

3

Chris,

Edinburgh 22/04/2007 15:52:38

#1: I can assure you that when I have to get up at 6:00am each weekday and am kept awake until after 2:00am (despite the legislation forbidding fireworks after 11:00pm), then a total ban sounds a great idea.
One problem seems to be that the manufacturers have been persuaded that people want noise more than visual display. This makes the fireworks more intrusive. One product on sale is "The box of 100 bangs!", so obviously a visual display is secondary to the audible one. Try counting that after you have gone to bed and just been woken up.
A second problem is that people who have no work to go to in the morning just want to have fun into the wee sma' hours. The noise of fireworks travels further than a home disco.

4

Soon to be returnee,

22/04/2007 23:18:13

Banning fireworks is a knee jerk reaction. At the end of the day, it should all come down to personal responsibility. Bear in mind: how many firework users are there per year? Lots! What percentage is 94 out of lots? A very small number!

I currently live in Australia where our bug bear is private swimming pool safety. Due to a couple of unfortunate drownings of small children, we are now forced to fence in our pools, install automatic closers on external doors, etc... (in our case we have to move our external door handles up by 15mm to be legal!!). The list just goes on. It takes no account of whether your household even has children!

The point of this? Personal responsibility and education should be route to follow. Reaction laws don't address the issue, they just make people try to circumvent them. Prohibition in the States worked a treat, didn't it?

5

AnthonyUK,

Accrington,Lancs,UK 30/06/2009 16:17:51
A sales ban on fireworks will merely encourage a blackmarket of illegal firework imports of unknown origin onto the public and they won't be regulated which means they could be poor quality,potentially dangerous and even lethal or maybe even deadly unlike the regulated legal safe imports of tested BS7114 UK manufacturer/distributor/importer fireworks by trusted names in the UK.

 

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