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Old 25-12-16, 10:03
Hanno Spoelstra's Avatar
Hanno Spoelstra Hanno Spoelstra is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: The Netherlands
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lynn Eades View Post
Maybe Hanno or a moderator with the skills can edit out the peripheral junk.
This link may work better: https://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/...itary-vehicles

I have quoted the article verbatim below:
Quote:
Hemmings Daily
European collectors restricted from buying tanks, other vintage military vehicles

Daniel Strohl on Dec 22nd, 2016

Under new security measures passed this week in Europe, firearms collectors there – including collectors of tanks and other weapon-toting military vehicles – will face greater scrutiny from authorities in an attempt to crack down on terrorist activity.
The revised European Union’s Firearms Directive, which the European Commission, Parliament, and Council agreed to earlier in December, passed a majority of EU Member States earlier this week with only two countries, the Czech Republic and Luxembourg, opposing it. While the majority of the new regulations in the revised Firearms Directive dealt with tightening regulations on certain non-lethal weapons that could be made lethal, the revisions also explicitly address firearms collectors – previously exempted from the Firearms Directive – as well as deactivated weapons, such as those found on vintage military vehicles.
Specifically according to a European Commission fact sheet on the revisions, the new regulations treat collectors and museums like any other private citizen, which is to say they may not acquire military vehicles (which fall under the Directive’s Category A, the same category as fully automatic weapons) unless individually permitted by their country’s authorities. The new regulations also reclassify deactivated weapons as Category C firearms “subject to declaration to national authorities;” the Firearms Directive did not previously regulate deactivated firearms.
The EU already implemented legislation in April that specified exactly how firearms are to be deactivated.
While the revisions appear to grandfather in current owners of vintage military vehicles equipped with weapons, they also appear to require current owners of deactivated weapons permanently mounted to military vehicles to register their vehicles and to add identifying marks to the vehicles’ weapons. In addition, the revisions limit the buying, selling, or trading of military vehicles equipped with active or deactivated weapons within the European Union.
The revisions do not appear to strike any sort of distinction between vintage military vehicles and weapons and more current military vehicles and weapons. Nor do the revisions appear to require any current owners of vintage military vehicles with active weapons to deactivate those weapons.
Authorities in Europe began the process of revising the existing Firearms Directive following last year’s Paris terrorist attacks with the aim of preventing deactivated weapons from becoming reactivated and of closing loopholes that would allow firearms to fall into the hands of terrorists.
While the Fédération Internationale des Véhicules Anciens, which represents collector car interests in Europe, has yet to comment on the most recent action, FIVA officials earlier this year voiced their opposition to the revisions, noting that historic and collectible military vehicles would not make for likely candidates for use by terrorists or criminals.
FIVA instead proposed to create registries for “artifacts of cultural and historical interest” to include vintage military vehicles and thus allow collectors and museums continued access to them.
The revisions to the Firearms Directive have yet to pass the wider European Parliament or EU Council of Ministers, which are expected to vote on the revisions early next year.
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