Met commissioner Bernard Hogan-Howe tells hearing in London that his force seized a record 714 firearms in 2015

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

More guns are being seized in cities across Britain as the number of firearms being smuggled into the country increases, Britain’s most senior police officer has said.

Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Metropolitan police commissioner, told a hearing at London’s City Hall that a rise in gun crime in the capital was being put down to an increase in the number of weapons coming into the country.

The Met seized a “worrying” record number of weapons in 2015, including semiautomatic guns, Hogan-Howe said.

“We’ve seized more firearms than ever before,” he said. “In the previous year [2015] we’ve seized 714 guns – that’s around two per day. In a city this size, that’s a worrying number. This is an increase on previous years. Some of them are semiautomatic weapons, too.

“If you look around the big cities of the country, they are seeing a similar profile. Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool – they are seeing big rises as well.”

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Hogan-Howe pictured earlier this year with weapons seized by police officers in London. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA

The main supply route into the UK is across the continent from eastern European countries such as Albania and Lithuania, and significant seizures have recently been made of guns coming in from France.

Hogan-Howe said: “We are targeting with the National Crime Agency the supply routes. It’s either from abroad, it’s stealing legally owned weapons in this country, sometimes you’ve got to look at military supplies and also you’ve got to look at licensed dealers.”

Officers also monitor potential supply routes from the US, as well as the parcel post.

Figures show there were 302 discharges of lethal barrelled weapons in London in the year to the end of August 2016 – 91 more than in the previous year. There was also a leap of one-third in August 2016 compared with June. There were 46 discharges in both July and August.

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In May, Hogan-Howe warned that the rise in the number of available guns meant terrorists had a greater chance of getting their hands on lethal weapons.



Scotland Yard has launched a crackdown on gun crime hotspots, called Operation Viper, following a “significant” increase in the number of shootings in the capital.

In August the force introduced routine armed patrols in London in response to terrorist atrocities in mainland Europe.