Coventry Telegraph

Met: YouTube must help stop violence

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YOUTUBE has deleted just over half of the music videos Scotland Yard has asked to be taken down because they incite violence, according to police figures.

Metropolit­an Police Commission­er Cressida Dick has blamed social media for fuelling a surge in murders in London, singling out the drill genre of rap music for glamourisi­ng violent crime.

Drill videos easily able to view online feature hooded and masked gangs threatenin­g each other with violent lyrics, gestures and hand signals, with some attracting millions of views.

The Met has built up a database of more than 1,400 videos to use as an intelligen­ce tool as the force tries to tackle an increase in killings and other violent crime, with more than 60 murder investigat­ions launched already this year.

In the past two years Scotland Yard has asked YouTube to take down between 50 and 60 music videos, having to prove they incite violence for the requests to be successful.

The video-sharing site, owned by Google, has removed more than 30 of the clips from the platform – or just over half – in cases where they were found to be in violation of its policies. YouTube said the majority of the videos flagged up by the Met are no longer available on its platform and the company has developed policies to tackle videos related to knife crime.

Some of the drill music videos still available online feature groups associated with the post code war linked to the murder of Tanesha Melbourne, 17, who was shot dead in Tottenham last month.

It is not known whether the Met has asked YouTube to remove them.

Detective Superinten­dent Mike West said the force has been monitoring the increase in the number of videos that incite violence since September 2015.

“The gangs try to outrival each other with the filming and content – what looks like a music video can actually contain explicit language with gangs threatenin­g each other,” he said.

“There are gestures of violence, with hand signals suggesting they are firing weapons and graphic descriptio­ns of what they would do to each other.

“The Met has got a central database of more than 1,400 indexed videos that we assess and use to gather intelligen­ce.”

DS West said the force only asks for videos which “we believe raise the risk of violence” to be removed.

He added: “Closer partnershi­p work with Google has been developed in the past few months, in order to evolve and increase our capacity to remove social media videos that incite violence, as quickly as possible.”

A YouTube spokesman said: “We have developed policies specifical­ly to help tackle videos related to knife crime in the UK and are continuing to work constructi­vely with experts on this issue. Along with others in the UK, we share the deep concern about this issue and do not want our platform used to incite violence.”

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