Imitation "Samurai swords to be banned" in Britain

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wacki

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/03/05/nsamurai105.xml

The sale of imitation samurai swords could be banned by the end of the year, the Home Office announced today.

Importing or hiring the weapons could also be made illegal following a string of samurai sword attacks in recent years.

Breaching the ban, which is targeted at cheap imitation samurai swords rather than the more expensive genuine collectors' items made by licensed swordsmiths in Japan, would result in up to six months in jail and a £5,000 fine.

Collectors and martial arts enthusiasts owning or using genuine samurai swords would be exepmt from the ban

According to Home Office estimates, there have been at least 80 serious crimes involving the swords in England and Wales over the last four years.

One MP recently warned that they were being used by criminal gangs as the preferred weapon of choice after guns.

Last month, amphetamine addict Hugh Penrose was jailed for at least 19 years for hacking a 21-year-old woman with a samurai sword and then deliberately running her over.

In October, Bradley Moran was jailed for 17 years for murdering another man with a samurai sword following an argument in a nightclub.

It is currently legal to buy samurai swords - which are freely available at martial arts shops and on the internet - provided they are not brandished in a public place.

The Home Office now wants to ban their sale as part of a wider crackdown on knives and bladed weapons.

Carrying a samurai sword in a public place already attracts a maximum jail sentence of four years.

Vernon Coaker, the Home Office minister, said today: "Samurai sword crime is low in volume but high in profile and I recognise it can have a devastating impact.

"Banning the sale, import and hire will take more dangerous weapons out of circulation, making our streets safer.

"We recognise it is the cheap, easily-available samurai swords which are being used in crime and not the genuine, more expensive samurai swords which are of interest to collectors and martial arts enthusiasts."

"It is already illegal to have a samurai sword in a public place but I want to restrict the number of dangerous weapons in circulation to enhance community safety."

The plans are outlined in a consultation paper, Banning Offensive Weapons, published by the Home Office today.

At present there are 17 weapons, including knuckle-dusters and batons, on the Offensive Weapons Order.

The exemptions would be for groups such as the To-ken Society of Great Britain and the British Kendo Association.

Last year, Tory MP James Brokenshire (Hornchurch) said cheap samurai swords were as easy to buy "as purchasing a Lotto ticket".
 
becauset his type of ban worked so well when they outlawed guns and knives. there aren't any of THOSE on the streets in jolly old England. :rolleyes:
 
One MP recently warned that they were being used by criminal gangs as the preferred weapon of choice after guns.

Guns? In England? This is so dumb. They bring up that guns are still being used after they were banned, and now they want to ban samurai swords, to "restrict the number of dangerous weapons in circulation to enhance community safety":barf: :barf: :barf:
 
Last year, Tory MP James Brokenshire (Hornchurch) said cheap samurai swords were as easy to buy "as purchasing a Lotto ticket".

That's because they are cheap, crappy stainless steel rubbish. A crowbar is probably more dangerous.
 
These threads about UK bans are getting old

We could just say that "anything remotely resembling a weapon is banned in the UK", and save some server space.

;)
 
Last year, Tory MP James Brokenshire (Hornchurch) said cheap samurai swords were as easy to buy "as purchasing a Lotto ticket".

Another typical Tory slimeball,who sold his sole,to the anti-weapons devils.:fire: :barf:.Of course after 1988,we all know what those idiots,did after Hungerford,didn't we.:barf:
 
Not surprising considering they just had a sword buyback in Scottland, and banned swords there. Then proceeded to do the same throughout the entire UK. Naturaly the same legal restrictions would be applied in other parts of the UK in short order.

_41431045_swordthree203pacred.jpg

Here is an article making all of the usual gun arguments you hear here about for the children and making the streets safer in regards to swords and other bladed weapons:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/glasgow_and_west/4788881.stm
They created strict licensing requirements to sell a blade. Someone must be 18 to even purchase a kitchen knife. There has been a move to only allow kitchen knives with flat points as they argue any time a point is needed a smaller knife could be used.

Shops selling swords will need a licence, as will businesses dealing with non-domestic knives
Non domestic? Reminds me of the "no sporting purpose" clause.

"Knife-carrying is all too prevalent in some communities, particularly in the west of Scotland, and has cut short and scarred too many young lives.
For the children!

It is now a crime subject to 4 years in prison for having a sword, and years in prison just for marketing a sword or knife as capable of being used in combat. Meaning if you even attach the mention of self defense to it your guilty of a felony crime subject to years in prison.

Oh the best is that police have the authority to detain any single person they have reason to believe is carrying a knife!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/5303330.stm

Simply believing you may have a sharp piece of metal now makes many of your rights simply vanish.

They even have portable metal detectors to just screen random people in the public:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/glasgow_and_west/5181516.stm

Here is a picture of over 100,000 knives siezed during the "amnesty" throughout the UK including Scotland, Whales, and jolly ol England:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/5178720.stm
_41888032_knives-pa-body.jpg
Glass bottles and glasses are also banned in public places like pubs etc.
 
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