Two more teenagers killed as knife murders in Britain soar
LONDON (Reuters) - Two teenagers were killed in knife attacks in Britain over the weekend, bringing the number of people killed in stabbings this year to at least 24 and pushing the bloodshed to the forefront of national concern.
British Interior Minister Sajid Javid said he would be meeting police chiefs this week to find ways to tackle the problem as he called for an end to the “senseless violence”.
“Serious violence is on the rise, communities are being torn apart and families are losing their children,” Javid told parliament.
Police say the surge in knife crime in a country where guns are hard to obtain has been driven by several factors, including rivalries between drug gangs, cuts to youth services and provocations on social media. Many have occurred in poor areas of London.
The issue has shot to the top of the political agenda after figures show the number of deaths from stabbings reached a record last year. The number of children in England aged 16 and under being stabbed rose by 93 percent between 2016 and 2018.
At the same time, police have suffered big cuts in staffing and funding under austerity measures imposed by Prime Minister Theresa May’s government, particularly during her tenure as Home Secretary in the years before she took the top job.
In the latest deaths, 17-year-old schoolboy Yousef Ghaleb Makki was stabbed in a village near Manchester while he was visiting a friend. Two boys, also aged 17, have been arrested on suspicion of murder.
Jodie Chesney, a 17-year-old Girl Scout, was killed in a knife attack in a park in east London. Her family have called her murder a “totally random and unprovoked attack”.
“A Knife to the Heart of Britain”, the Daily Mail splashed across its front page on Monday.
British media made much of the fact that Makki lived in an affluent area and went to a private school. Most attacks take place in more deprived areas with higher general crime rates.
NATIONAL EMERGENCY
Lancashire Police said five people had been arrested on Monday after a group of men walked into the grounds of a college carrying knives and threatening students in what was described as a “targeted attack”.
Two weeks ago, three teenagers were stabbed in Birmingham, central England, prompting a senior regional police official to say Britain was facing a national emergency.
A total of 285 knife and sharp instrument homicides were recorded in the year ending March 2018, the highest number since Home Office records began in 1946. The previous high was in the year ending March 2008, with 268 homicides by stabbing.
Nineteen murders have taken place in London this year, according to London Metropolitan Police.
The force had arranged more officers to be on duty in response to the violent crime wave, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Graham McNulty said.
Prime Minister May rejected claims that falling police numbers following funding cuts was fuelling the rise in knife crime.
“If you look at the figures what you see is there is no direct correlation between certain crimes and police numbers,” she said.
The government said it had set out a range of actions to tackle violent crime, including a 200 million pound ($265 million) youth fund and an independent review of drug misuse.
It has also proposed an extra 970 million pounds in police funding for 2019-20.
“We’re taking action on many fronts & I’ll be meeting police chiefs this week to hear what more can be done. Vital we unite to stop this senseless violence,” Javid said.
Reporting By Andrew MacAskill; Editing by Janet Lawrence
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.