Ministers poised to back arming police with electronic stun guns
Ministers are poised to agree to equip the police with weapons which deliver an electric shock, sources have told broadcaster RTL Nieuws.
The cabinet will spend €30m to ensure that all police officers ‘who need one’ have a taser in their standard equipment and get training in their use. This, RTL said, means front-line officers who may have to defend themselves will be given the weapon.
Justice minister Ferd Grapperhaus told MPs in September that he backs arming the police with electronic stun weapons such as tasers, if the introduction is done with caution.
His comments came after Dutch police chief Erik Akerboom called on ministers to include electronic stun guns in the regular police kit immediately.
‘Introduce it,’ Akerboom is quoted as saying in the Telegraaf. ‘Things are taking too long. Politicians must act, especially since the recent spate of violent attacks on officers.’
Last November, police officials told the justice ministry that electric shock weapons such as tasers should become part of the equipment used by police officers on emergency service duty.
They said stun guns should be available to all police teams which are called out on emergencies. It will take five years before the introduction because 17,000 officers need to undergo special training to use the weapons, police said at the time.
In June 2018, a report on a year long trial by the police academy found that tasers do have ‘added value’ for the police and that the threat of use was enough to calm the situation down in six out of 10 cases.
Tasers work by firing electric charges of around 50,000 volts at a suspect from a distance, temporarily disabling them. Police say the danger of serious or permanent injury is minimal, but experts disagree on the risk to the heart.
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