Scottish Daily Mail

Rudd bans teens from buying acid or knives

- By Ian Drury Home Affairs Editor

STRICT laws to tackle the horrific epidemic of acid and knife attacks were unveiled yesterday by the Home Secretary.

Amber Rudd pledged to act following the outcry over a spate of ‘absolutely revolting’ crimes in which corrosive liquids ruined victims’ lives.

Attackers have caused horrendous injuries by splashing victims with substances ranging from household sink and drain cleaner to almost pure sulphuric acid that can be ordered online without checks.

Miss Rudd vowed to make it illegal to sell acid to under-18s, punishable by six months in prison. It will also be an offence to carry acid in public without good reason, carrying up to four years in jail.

In a well-received speech to the Tory conference, she also announced:

Tighter restrictio­ns on the sale of sulphuric acid, which can be an ingredient in an explosive used in UK terror attacks;

Investment in internet technology to destroy vile images of child abuse;

Banning online knife sales to under-18s by making it illegal to deliver them to homes. Proof of age will be checked at collection points;

Flick knives and so-called zombie knives will be outlawed from being kept at home, with a maximum fouryear jail penalty;

A generation of children would be ‘needlessly failed’ if WhatsApp refused to let law chiefs snare paedophile­s who use the encrypted service;

Repeatedly watching terror propaganda such as beheading videos and bombmaking guides online could be punished by 15 years in jail, as revealed by the Mail;

Security services in the UK have foiled seven terror plots so far this year.

Miss Rudd’s public protection measures were intended to send ‘the strongest possible message to gangs and criminals that they faced severe punishment.

A consultati­on on offensive weapons is to be published, giving the police greater powers to pursue offenders. Her promise came as it was revealed that police recorded more than 400 acid attacks in the six months to April.

The NHS said there had been 624 admissions since 2012 as a result of ‘assault by corrosive substance’, with 109 in 2016-17.

Victims can be blinded or disfigured. Only last month, a 15-year-old boy was arrested after six people were injured in an attack at a shopping centre in Stratford, east London.

Sulphuric acid, which has been used in the most horrendous attacks against victims, can also be a key component in the home-made explosive TATP – dubbed ‘Mother of Satan’ – which was used in the terror attacks at the Manchester Arena and Parsons Green.

Under the crackdown, it will become a regulated substance under the Poisons Act, which means anyone wanting to obtain it will need a Home Office licence.

Illicit buyers or vendors who fail to make checks face jail sentences of two years.

A Scottish Government spokesman said: ‘Proposals relating to the sale of corrosive substances and the online sale of knives are potentiall­y reserved under the Scotland Act.

‘We are engaging with the UK Government on steps to strengthen the legislativ­e regime in these areas, which are issues that should be properly considered on a UK-wide basis.

‘We have pressed for action in relation to the online sale of knives and are happy to work with the UK Government as the details of specific proposals are worked up.’ Miss Rudd revealed a £600,000 investment in technology to remove indecent images from the web at an unpreceden­ted rate.

Project Arachnid is a web ‘crawler’ that checks the digital fingerprin­ts of thousands of images every second, triggering alarms when a vile image is copied repeatedly.

It then tells technology firms so that they can intervene quickly. Miss Rudd said: ‘Spreading indecent images of children online is an absolutely abhorrent crime, and social media platforms cannot be looked upon as safe spaces for sharing hateful material.’

‘An absolutely abhorrent crime’

 ??  ?? Speech: Amber Rudd at the conference yesterday
Speech: Amber Rudd at the conference yesterday

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