Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
International

UK Amends Weapons Bill To Ensure Right To Possession Of Kirpans By Sikhs

IANS, 30 Nov, 2018 08:20 PM
    The UK government has confirmed an amendment to a new weapons Bill going through Parliament to ensure that it would not impact the right of the British Sikh community to possess and supply kirpans, or religious swords.
     
     
    The Offensive Weapons Bill, 2018, completed its various readings in the House of Commons this week and has now moved to the House of Lords for approval.
     
     
    It involves a new offence of possessing certain offensive weapons in public and places new restrictions on the online sales of bladed articles and corrosive products in attempt to crackdown on rising knife and acid-related attacks in the country.
     
     
    The All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for British Sikhs led a delegation to the UK Home Office in recent weeks to ensure that the kirpan remains exempt when the new Bill becomes law.
     
     
     
     
    “I am pleased to see the government amendment and look forward to seeing an accompanying set of documentation, which reflects the importance of not criminalising the Sikh community for the sale or possession of large kirpans,” said Labour MP Preet Kaur Gill, Chair of the APPG for British Sikhs.
     
     
    Gill, the first female Sikh MP in the House of Commons, was accompanied by APPG vice-chairs Pat McFadden and Dominic Grieve at a meeting with UK Home Secretary Sajid Javid and Home Office minister Victoria Atkins to discuss changes to the Offensive Weapons Bill, which would maintain status quo in continuing to legally safeguard the sale, possession and use of large kirpans.
     
     
    Her fellow Sikh MP, Tan Dhesi, also made an intervention during the Offensive Weapons Bill debate in the Commons to seek “assurances about the kirpan, given the Sikh community’s serious concerns”. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Empire State Building Lights Up In Orange To Celebrate Diwali

    Diwali 2018: At the November 7 ceremony, Miss America 2014 Nina Devuluri and popular singer Jay Sean along with Srujal Parikh flipped the switch to turn on the orange lights on top of the Empire State Building.

    Empire State Building Lights Up In Orange To Celebrate Diwali

    Accosting Acosta: Will President Pay Political Price For Banning CNN Reporter Jim Acosta?

    WASHINGTON — One dramatic White House expulsion might have gotten much of the attention Thursday, but there's been another that free-speech advocates say must not be ignored: the banning of CNN reporter Jim Acosta.

    Accosting Acosta: Will President Pay Political Price For Banning CNN Reporter Jim Acosta?

    US Midterm Elections: Democrats Win House Majority, Republicans Hold Senate

    The Democrats on Wednesday secured a majority in the House of Representatives for the first time in eight years but the Republicans retained control of the Senate in US midterm elections seen as a referendum on the Trump presidency.

    US Midterm Elections: Democrats Win House Majority, Republicans Hold Senate

    United Nations Postal Agency Issues Special Diwali Stamp

    India on Wednesday thanked the UN Postal Administration for issuing special postal stamps to commemorate Diwali, the Indian festival of lights.

    United Nations Postal Agency Issues Special Diwali Stamp

    All 4 Indian-American Members Of Congress Re-Elected

    All the four Indian-American Democrat members of the House of Representatives were re-elected in Tuesday's election and a member of the community won the Attorney General's position in Wisconsin state.

    All 4 Indian-American Members Of Congress Re-Elected

    'Samosa Caucus' Fails To Increase Its Strength In US Midterm Elections

    None of the more than half a dozen new Indian American candidates, many of whom caught national attention by giving a tough fight to their opponents and outraising them in the fund raisers, could make it to the House of Representatives, which is equivalent to Lok Sabha in the Indian parliament.

    'Samosa Caucus' Fails To Increase Its Strength In US Midterm Elections