The government and some gun policy analysts were surprised today by the large number of weapons that were surrendered in the first nationwide amnesty since a 1996 massacre in Tasmania state galvanised support for national gun controls.
Tough laws that virtually banned semi-automatic rifles from private ownership accompanied by a government-funded gun buyback reduced the size Australia's civilian arsenal by almost a third.
The reports says a three-month amnesty that ended in September also collected almost 2,500 semi-automatic and fully-automatic guns -- the rapid-fire categories particularly targeted by the 1996 reforms.