Follow Us

UK removes ‘large amount’ of online gun-making guides
Counter terrorism - UK lowers terror threat level 

Feb 3, 2023 | studies

UK police removing ‘large amount’ of online gun-making guides

theguardian – Counter-terrorism police are removing “a large amount” of homemade gun-making guides from the internet amid fears that far-right extremists are producing 3D-printed firearms to use on the streets of Britain.Detectives have said DIY guns are increasingly viable and include semi-automatic weapons that can fire multiple rounds at a time.Last week, a teenage extremist from Derbyshire was ordered to serve 11 and a half years in a young offender institution for encouraging racist attacks and attempting to make a “highly dangerous” FGC-9 firearm with a 3D printer.

The judge, Patrick Field KC, said the gun that Daniel Harris, 19, tried to build was “intended for use in a terrorist outrage” in Britain and that his failure was only “a matter of good fortune”.DI Chris Brett, from Counter-Terrorism Policing East Midlands, told the Guardian the easy availability of gun-making manuals online was “a threat” and that officers were removing “a large amount” of that material, often produced by gun enthusiasts in the US.He said: “We’ve got a number of teams in counter-terrorism specifically focused on removing extremist content from the internet and that includes instructional stuff on weapons. We would appeal to the public to report that material if they come across it on the internet.”

It took the Guardian just three clicks from Google to find a 194-page instruction booklet to build a semi-automatic FGC-9 firearm, which Harris tried to construct at his grandfather’s house in Glossop.It took under five minutes to find a Florida-based website selling metal gun components for only £122. They were disguised as wind chimes to evade detection during delivery.Tutorial videos are posted online often by US-based gun enthusiasts with thousands of followers. Although YouTube has strict rules against posting gun-making manuals, influencers are able to get around the restrictions by directing their followers to videos on other YouTube-style sites.

The National Crime Agency warned in November that the latest 3D weapons were “credible and viable” and “stuff that you definitely, definitely wouldn’t want to see on the streets in the UK”.A month earlier, the Metropolitan police uncovered a suspected makeshift 3D firearms factory at a house in London.Peter Squires, a professor of criminology and public policy at the University of Brighton, said the discovery – along with several more across Europe and Australia last year – appeared to have been “kind of a wake-up call” for UK police.Terrorism experts have warned that the homemade weapons appear to becoming more popular with extremists, particularly far-right groups online. In 2019, a neo-Nazi shot two people with a homemade firearm during a racist attack on a synagogue in Halle, eastern Germany.

 

Follow us

Related Posts

Counter terrorism ـ German migration crisis

Counter terrorism ـ German migration crisis

European Observatory to Combat Radicalization – EOCR Does German migration crisis spell the end for Olaf Scholz? thenationalnews - At a meet-and-greet this week with the foreign diplomatic corps in Berlin, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz admitted his guests might be...

Share This