Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Hunting shops given knife deadline

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 06 June 2009
HUNTING shops and other outlets selling non-domestic knives have been given 12 months to get a licence under a government crackdown on knife crime.
Window displays of knives will be banned, and retailers will have to keep a record of knives sold and of how they checked the age of the purchaser.

The licences will cover specialist shops that sell items such as hunting knives and machetes but wi
ll not apply to stores selling ordinary domestic knives.

Licensing boards will also have the power to set extra conditions to reflect local circumstances.

Councils will start receiving applications by 1 September, with a 1 December deadline, justice secretary Kenny MacAskill announced yesterday.

The system dates back to legislation launched by Labour in the last Scottish Parliament but not enacted until 2007, and a consultation exercise was then held. That exercise resulted in some requirements – such as CCTV cameras outside shops selling knives – being left to councils' discretion instead of being compulsory, prompting Labour accusations that the scheme was being watered down.

Announcing the timetable, Mr MacAskill said hunting and fishing knives were dangerous weapons in the wrong hands.

"That's why we're introducing this licensing scheme to make sure those who sell these knives do so responsibly and comply fully with the law," he said.

However, he stressed that there had to be room for local flexibility.

Mr MacAskill added: "Why should a shop in a small rural village selling fishing knives, rods and bait and frequented mostly by those on their way to a nearby river, be subject to exactly the same requirements as a shop in a busy street in a large city?

"We need a common-sense approach to make sure this licensing system is as effective and simple as it can be – whilst also making sure it does its job of making sure these knives don't fall into the wrong hands.

"I'm confident that we've taken on board the comments in the consultation to make sure we've got the balance between what's needed in all cases and what is best determined at a local level."

The justice secretary has delayed the introduction of the licensing scheme after concerns were raised by local authorities that they were already struggling to cope with bringing in new alcohol regulations.

Labour's justice spokesman Richard Baker yesterday repeated calls for the SNP to bring in minimum sentences for knife crimes. "The licensing scheme should have been introduced by this year, not next year, and Mr MacAskill's dithering tells us everything we need to know about this soft-touch justice minister," he said.

The licensing scheme has been opposed by retail organisation fearful of the impact on hardware stores.

Fiona Moriarty, director of the Scottish Retail Consortium, said: "We were originally concerned about the definition of non-domestic knives but we now know the regulations won't apply to the vast majority of items sold by mainstream retailers.

"But there are other retailers where items are being sold for one purpose – to maim, harm or injure."





The full article contains 507 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 June 2009 10:00 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Knife culture
 
1

,

06/06/2009 02:14:51
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

,

06/06/2009 03:21:00
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Argyll Exile,

Durham CA 06/06/2009 05:25:29
So will ceremonial / cultural knives be controlled also ? I got my sgian dubh and broadsword in the Army but I suppose there was a background check !
4

overton,

aberdeen 06/06/2009 06:47:16
More stupidity from a clueless and inept minister.

It would be better giving the Police and Courts the power to actually deal properly with criminal scum rather than letting them off with a wrap on the knuckles.
5

fife runner,

06/06/2009 07:10:33
I agree #1 why not all shops. I bought a new carving knife not long ago. It is a deadly weapon in the wrong hands.
6

The Tin Man,

06/06/2009 08:25:14
MSPs = morons

That much is clear.
7

Stan Butler,

06/06/2009 09:08:58

They should ban the sale of pointed knives to the general public. The only people who need specialist knives with a pointed end are butchers. Round nosed knives do everything that you legitimately need a knife to do.
8

Al Pacino,

06/06/2009 09:53:01
Overton,8. The Fuzz are obliged to lock people up for carrying knives now and send them to court the next day, no quick release and a summons. It's the courts and their painfully slow procedure coupled with insufficient prison space that's the problem. More prisons would be nice and huge, American style sentences.
9

Dragonlord,

06/06/2009 09:55:04
3#Vista is correct. I have a hunting knife,it is small with a folding blade of around 3". I also have a butchers knife in the kitchen, with a fixed blade of around 7". So if you need to show ID in a store you will simply go into the kitchen or dept store and buy one. The law is already in place to deal with this. Simply make jail a tougher place and send offenders there for longer. Make the time fit the crime.
10

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 06/06/2009 10:12:30
Better stock up on me knives while I can!

Lets see:

1 fish filleting knife
1 shephards knife
1 general purpose hunting knife
1 swiss army knife
1 pen knife
1 alarmingly large hunting knife as seen in rambo.

Yup, that should do it!
11

drunken proffet,

Tassy 06/06/2009 10:18:05
A year or so ago I looked for a catapult for going fishing. I know it is not too koscher, since you spread a bit of chum around the area you want to cast your line. Illegal, in fact he gave me a very funny look. Plenty crossbows displayed across the wall, but catapults definitely a no no. I am no great follower of Islam, but you can rest assured that the shopkeepers stock implements of self destruction that are only bought so the family feels comfy. Or is some enthusiast going to tell me different.
12

Allan(handofgod137),

06/06/2009 10:35:10
Another idiotic idea from the morons at folyrood.
13

The Ayrshire Bard,

06/06/2009 10:56:18
King Canute springs to mind. Handguns are illegal yet gun crime is on the rise. Hard drugs are illegal yet the drug trade flourishes. Racism and hate crime is illegal but that doesn't seem to have got through to Rangers and Celtic fans, nor to those who live in our midst yet wish to kill us. Speeding is illegal yet thousands continue to drive over the limit. Legislating is one thing, enforcing it is another.
14

MoiraMac,

06/06/2009 11:38:17
Stanley knives from B&Q?

http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/topstories/Knifeman-who-attacked-two-OAPS.5340134.jp
15

sicasapig,

turra 06/06/2009 20:48:37
Stan Butler,
06/06/2009 09:08:58

They should ban the sale of pointed knives to the general public. The only people who need specialist knives with a pointed end are butchers. Round nosed knives do everything

so you think these kids do not know how to use a grindstone,or a good old piece of sandstone.[[ what a thick statement]]
16

,

06/06/2009 23:41:39
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
17

,

06/06/2009 23:48:10
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
18

Finlang,

Hong Kong 07/06/2009 03:17:33
#15 The Ayrshire Bard

Excellent summary. MacAskill remains a soundbite-obsessed dunce who will eventually bring down his party unless he is edged out.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.