Fiji Sun

Jail threat for people caught carrying acid in Britain in bid to cut attacks

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London: People carrying corrosives, such as acids, without good reason, face six months in prison under a package of measures announced Saturday by British Home Secretary Amber Rudd.

The move followed a spate of acid attacks, particular­ly in the London area in which people have been scarred for life by having acids thrown into their faces. London has been named as the hot spot for acid attacks, accounting for more than half of Britain’s acid attacks. Figures released by the Metropolit­an Police showed the number of acid attacks have more than doubled from less than 200 in 2014 to 431 in 2016.

Prison sentences for those who repeatedly carry corrosive substances without good reason are among a set of new laws aimed at tackling serious violence being proposed, said the Home Office in London. It would place the onus on the individual caught in possession to explain why they are carrying corrosives, rather than on the police to prove that it was intended to cause injury. People convicted of this offence for a second time face a mandatory minimum sentence in line with existing knife possession laws. The Home Office said the proposals are part of consultati­ons on new laws and measures to reduce violent crime in response to recent rises in police-recorded knife and firearm offences and the emergence of attacks using acids and corrosive substances.

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