The Phnom Penh Post

London confronts spate of murders

- Ceylan Yeginsu

ONE teenager was caught in the crossfire of a drive-by attack. Another was shot in the face. They died within 24 hours of each other. Two days later, another teenager and a burglary suspect were fatally stabbed and a man was beaten to death in what appeared to have been a late-night brawl outside a betting shop.

On Thursday, five teenagers were stabbed in an hour and a half, including a boy of 13.

All these attacks took place in London over the past week, part of an apparent spike in violence. After a long period of steady declines in violent crime, the city has averaged in excess of three killings a week this year.

More than 50 people have been killed in London since the start of 2018. The total for all of 2017, a year when the city suffered multiple terrorist attacks, was 116. Criminolog­ists have expressed caution about drawing conclusion­s from only a few months’ figures, but if the uptick continues, London will see its highest level of violence in more than a decade.

A year with 200 homicides, for a city of over 8.5 million people, would be far from a shocking high in the United States. New York City, with a similar population, had 292 murders last year, according to the 2018 Police Commission­er’s Report – a record low. In Britain, however, the prospect has alarmed politician­s and shaped public debate.

Analysts say that the surge in violent crime has been driven by several factors, including rivalries between drug gangs, cuts to youth services and social programs, and even the ease with which teenagers can now taunt and provoke one another on social media.

“It is difficult to address the causes of violence without addressing important social questions about the choices facing young people in terms of op- portunitie­s,” said Roger Grimshaw, research director at the Center for Crime and Justice Studies in London.

David Lammy, a lawmaker for the north London district of Tottenham, which has been hit hard by violent crime in recent weeks, said there was not one single cause for the surge, but that drug gangs were a major factor.

“What drives the gangs and the turf wars is an £11 billion cocaine drugs market,” he said in an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Today program. Eleven billion pounds is about $15.5 billion. “Drugs are prolific. They’re as prolific as ordering a pizza. You can get them on Snapchat, WhatsApp. That, in the end, is driving the turf war; and it’s driving the culture of violence.”

He suggested police had lost control of the drugs market, which he said was largely controlled by Eastern European gangs. Gangs increasing­ly use children and teenagers to carry drugs around the country, making them potential casualties in fighting between groups.

Most of the killings in London so far have been stabbings, most apparently carried out by young people. A majority of the victims were in their 20s or younger, and many have been black or from ethnic minorities.

Grimshaw warned sudden increases in crime could cause a type of “contagion” among communitie­s. “If a sufficient number of people feel frightened, they can look on knife-carrying as a way to make themselves feel safe, but it actually makes them less safe.”

Knife crime in Britain rose by 21 percent last year, and stabbings in London were at their highest level in six years, according to figures released in September by the Office for National Statistics, which compiles an authoritat­ive survey of crime in England and Wales.

A current government poster cam- paign in some parts of London promotes the virtues of “living knife free”.

This past week, the Metropolit­an Police promised a new task force of specially selected, dedicated police officers to focus on “violent crime, weapon-enabled crime and serious criminalit­y”.

“You will see us being even more proactive,” the force’s leader, Commission­er Cressida Dick, said in a statement. “We will have a greater presence in the hot spots of violence and a focused effort, including intelligen­ce-led stop-and-search and the use of specialist­s in covert tactics.”

Commission­er Dick told Sky News on Friday that 300 more officers would be deployed each day London’s streets. Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has blamed central government cuts in the policing budget for the rise in crime; police budgets in England and Wales have fallen an average of 20 percent, accounting for inflation, since 2010.

“Since 2014, we have seen an increase in violent crime in London and across the country,” Khan told the Press Associatio­n news agency. “Since I first became mayor, I have been saying to the government that it’s not sustainabl­e to make the level of cuts they have been making to London.”

Steve O’Connell, chairman of the London Assembly’s Police and Crime Committee, said that while the Metropolit­an Police deserved better funding, it still had the resources to deal with the recent spate of violent crime.

“They are taking this very seriously, but it’s much more complicate­d that just arresting people,” he said in a phone interview. “We need to get to the root cause of why so many young men use knives to settle their difference­s and why they are willing to inflict serious damage on people.”

“Once we understand this,” he said, “we need to make sure these people are taken off the street and put away for a long time.”

 ?? DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP ?? Armed police personnel patrol in London’s Trafalgar Square on August 4, 2016, following an overnight knife attack in Russell Square in which one woman was killed and five others injured.
DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP Armed police personnel patrol in London’s Trafalgar Square on August 4, 2016, following an overnight knife attack in Russell Square in which one woman was killed and five others injured.

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