Over ten thousand guns have been handed over voluntarily to the police since the start of a gun amnesty on January 1, the ministry of safety and security said on Tuesday.
This included 7881 licensed firearms and 2787 unlicensed weapons.
Close to 5400 rounds of ammunition were also taken from the public.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, Minister Charles Nqakula urged the public to hand over their illegal firearms before March 31 in order to avoid prosecution.
The firearms and ammunition handed in was being processed Nqakula said after the amnesty, the police will start "intensifying their operations in recovering illegal firearms and ammunition wherever they are".
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"Institutions and individuals found in possession of such firearms or ammunition would be dealt with harshly in terms of the law," the minister warned.
The amnesty entailed indemnity against prosecution for possessing firearms and ammunition illegally but did not absolve anyone from crimes committed with such weapons.
The firearms and ammunition handed in was being processed by designated police officials and disposed of through normal destruction procedures.
Statistics regarding firearms and ammunition in question were relayed daily to the Central Firearms Registry in Pretoria where a central database captured, collated and stored this data, he said.
In Johannesburg, 621 firearms have been handed over to the police since January.
Inspector Amanda Roestoff said 203 unlicensed firearms and 418
licensed weapons were handed over voluntarily.
Roestoff said the 418 firearms originated from inheritances or belonged to elderly people who no longer wanted to possess them.
Police also confiscated 192 firearms, including ammunition and magazines.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, Johannesburg area commissioner Oswald Reddy urged the public to "vigorously address firearms control" in the province.
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