Ukrainians are in possession of up to five million unregistered military-grade weapons, interior minister says
Ukraine has millions of illegal military-grade firearms in circulation and Kiev is now seeking to get the situation under control, Interior Minister Bogdan Drapaty has said.
The senior official made the remarks live on Friday as he spoke on Ukrainian TV, promoting a plan to fix the illegal-weaponry situation, which was hatched by the interior ministry and approved by the country’s parliament earlier this year.
While an exact number of illegal weapons in possession of Ukrainians is unknown, they likely have between two and five million pieces of military-grade firearms, the minister said, citing estimates by Kiev’s “European partners.”
The weaponry being held unlawfully includes “trophy” pieces found by civilians in combat zones, as well as firearms handed out in an uncontrolled fashion by the Ukrainian authorities themselves in the early days of the conflict with Russia, Drapaty explained. To avoid legal trouble, citizens must register their arsenals by December 25, he said.
“After declaring [firearms], a person will have the right to keep it as long as the martial law remains enacted, and to use it to resist armed aggression,” Drapaty stated, while urging civilians to use their firearms against the Russian military.
When martial law ends, the citizenry will have a 90-day period to surrender weaponry received from the Ukrainian authorities back to the state, he added. The firearms procured in such fashion remain Ukraine’s property, he stressed.
The civilians will be able to keep their “trophy” pieces of unknown origin when the conflict is over, with such weapons subject to conversion into civilian-legal firearms, according to Drapaty. Past the December 25 deadline, Ukrainian civilians will be obliged to immediately notify the authorities about any firearms they find, and may then decide whether they wish to keep these or not.
Earlier this month, the Ukrainian parliament passed a new, controversial law which allows civilians to engage Russian forces on their own and to use their firearms at will. The questionable legislation effectively goes against international law, which draws a clear distinction between civilians and combatants, with only the latter entitled to participate in hostilities during an armed conflict.