Bristol Post

5,000 knives Bins have helped take weapons off streets

- Alex DRISCOLL alex.driscoll@reachplc.com

MORE than 5,000 knives have been taken off the streets in Bristol and the wider region since surrender sites were introduced in 2016 by Avon and Somerset Police.

Since Operator Sceptre began eight years ago, a total of 17 surrender sites, including two bins, have been installed across the region, and there are plans to further add to that total this year.

Across 17 locations where these surrender sites and surrender bins have been installed, police say that over the last two years between 1,000 and 1,500 knives have been handed in. The number is also steadily rising, and police say that on average around 150 knives a week are being removed from the city’s streets.

Chief Inspector Mike Vass is the knife crime lead at Avon and Somerset Police and he confirmed that two new surrender bins will be installed in the next “few weeks”, in St Pauls and on Stapleton Road. He said this was only the start as the force hoped to install more bins over the coming year, with the locations being decided by community feedback and crime statistics.

Chief Insp Vass said: “Knife crime in the last six months especially is causing anxiety in the community so more bins will be made available. We want to make sure that every community has access to the right provisions.

“Since we started in 2016, there have been more than 5,000 knives handed in, the number of knives we see have increased as time has gone on. When we first started the surrender sites, we saw a lot of kitchen knives and antique knives. Now we find there are a lot of deadly knives which have no place in society. The community is also engaging with the knife bins which is so positive for the police as well. The surrender sites are reassuring the communitie­s that knives are being taken off the streets, and the engagement from those communitie­s helps the police and when the communitie­s are seeing all of us working together, it provides more reassuranc­e.”

Operation Sceptre began with mobile units and opening the police stations for knives to be handed in, which Chief Insp Vass said could have been “awkward” for those wanting to hand in the weapons. Over the years as more funding for the project became available, more surrender sites were installed across major roads and areas in Bristol.

Last year two surrender bins were installed, one at Castle Park and at The Park Centre in Knowle. With the two additional surrender sites planned later this year, it means there will be 19 sites across the city to dispose of knives. Chief Insp Vass said he thinks this is a “positive thing” for everyone involved.

He said: “We have an opportunit­y to stop a life being lost to a knife. That is itself a win. To reassure the community and take dangerous knives off the street, that is also a win.”

Earlier this year, the Post was part of the launch of the Together for Change campaign in a bid to prevent knives taking more lives in the city. Together for Change saw Bristol’s media come together with community leaders, major groups in Bristol and schools to say enough is enough.

Knife crime has had an unpreceden­ted impact in Bristol, not only on those who have sadly lost their lives, but on families, friends and entire communitie­s.

Mason Rist, Max Dixon, Darrian Williams, Aliki “Alex” Mamwa, Adam Ali Ibrahim, Mikey Roynon, Eddie King Muthemba Kinuthia, Isaac Brown and Martin Hefferman have all lost their lives, but many more have been victims of knife crime.

The number of dangerous knives being seen in the surrender bins has led to questions as to why these knives are available for people to buy.

Chief Inspector Mike Vass added: “We need to ask ourselves what is unnecessar­y on the retail market, why does anyone have access to them?”

 ?? ?? PC Tom Richards, Chief Inspector Mike Vass and PS Paul Giddings at the launch of the Community Weapons Surrender Bin at The Park Centre
PC Tom Richards, Chief Inspector Mike Vass and PS Paul Giddings at the launch of the Community Weapons Surrender Bin at The Park Centre

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