The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)
Terror tip-offs rise 600% in six months
Thousands of potential leads passed to police via dedicated telephone number after recent spate of terrorist attacks on the UK
Counter-terror agencies have registered a dramatic surge in tip-offs after Britain was hit by an unprecedented wave of attacks, new figures reveal.
Calls to a dedicated police hotline rocketed by more than 600% in just six months as thousands of potential leads poured in.
Statistics indicate the flurry of incidents this year, in which dozens of victims were killed or injured, prompted a spike in the volume of information passed to authorities by members of the public.
People can contact the hotline to pass on suspicions about possible terrorist activity.
Reports peaked in June, when the London Bridge and Finsbury Park attacks took place, with the service receiving 5,703 calls.
This compared to 748 in January and 764 in February, and a monthly average over the year to June of around 1,800.
The number of calls to the hotline rose to 2,449 in March, the month of the Westminster outrage, before dipping to 1,412 in April and then increasing to 4,191 in May, when the Manchester bombing occurred.
Figures disclosed by the National Police Chiefs’ Council following a Freedom of Information request show a sharp rise in contacts with the facility in the last two years.
It received 22,729 calls in the year to the end of June 2016 – almost double the tally of 11,892 in the previous 12 months. The service took 21,596 calls from July 2016 to June 2017.
Hannah Stuart, co-head of the security and extremism unit at think tank Policy Exchange, said it was not surprising that rises in the number of calls correspond to recent terrorist attacks.
She added: “Community-based intelligence is vital in tackling terrorism and in some cases has successfully prevented imminent attacks.
“Unprecedented numbers of individuals of concern to the security services in the UK right now means the task of identifying serious leads is a real challenge.” Police welcomed the rise in calls. Detective Chief Superintendent Clarke Jarrett, of the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism Command, said: “We need the public’s assistance to help keep us all safe from terrorism so it really is encouraging that more calls are being made to the confidential hotline.”