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Ealing Times
Article
July
2008
Knife
Crime
Knife crime
especially amongst young people is at the top of the country’s
political agenda and sadly it has blighted our own local area. Only
this week a 16 year old was in court for possession of a knife in
Greenford and during the past year there have been tragic deaths of
two young men in West Ealing and Windmill Park. Suggestions as to
how we tackle this problem are coming thick and fast and talk shows
and the tabloids are in overdrive.
People are
rightly concerned about this terrible problem but I would suggest
that a cool head and dispassionate assessment of the facts and
possible policy solutions is needed for this most complicated of
societal challenges to be effectively tackled.
Firstly looking
at the facts according to the British Crime Survey violent crime
over the last 11 years is down 40% with knives being used in about
8% of violent incidents, a proportion that has remained level
during this period. In London murder has declined slightly from
2.6% per 100,000 people in 2000 to 2.2% in 2007. However the
victims are getting younger, with twice as many under-17’s. People
prosecuted for carrying a knife are now almost three times as
likely to go to prison as ten years ago - from 6% in 1996 to 17% in
2006. Also only 15% of knife carriers intend to take part in crime
or gang activity, the other 85% doing so only out of
fear.
With this
factual context the proposals this week by the Prime Minister to
toughen up punishment, toughen up enforcement and toughen up
prevention seem to be a balanced way forward. Anybody who is using
a knife goes to prison; anybody who is carrying a knife is subject
to either prison or a strong community payback that forces them to
give service to the community – highly visible service often on a
Friday and Saturday night. The Youth Justice proposals to intervene
at a very early stage with 20,000 problem families are more likely
to work than more prison and offer a real way forward. Let’s hope
so.
Virendra Sharma
MP
Ealing
Southall
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