Why must victims of anti-social yobs pay to report them?
Baroness slams charge for 101 police line amid rising violence
FAMILIES targeted by yobs should not have to pay to report crimes to the police, the Victims’ Commissioner said yesterday.
Baroness Newlove condemned the 15p fee charged by phone firms for every call to the police 101 nonemergency number.
‘Why should there be a charge when 999 calls are free?’ she said.
Helen Newlove released a major report yesterday saying that families suffer in silence because police and councils routinely ignore gangs of yobs. She said ‘depressingly little’ had changed since her husband Garry was killed by drunken thugs outside their home in 2007.
Nearly four in ten people endured or witnessed antisocial behaviour in the last year – the highest level on record – according to the latest annual crime survey for England and Wales.
Baroness Newlove said it was ‘infuriating’ that loutish behaviour – including intimidation, drug-dealing, vandalism, drunken rowdiness and verbal abuse – was dismissed as low-level crime. She said it was instead ‘sustained and remorseless bullying and harassment’. Her report said it was a struggle to make public bodies understand the seriousness of antisocial behaviour and give support to victims. It found that:
The authorities ‘failed to appreciate’ the cumulative impact of persistent nuisance on victims, instead treating each incident in isolation and ignoring the underlying causes;
Victims were passed from one agency to another, leaving them feeling as if ‘no one is listening’;
Lengthy delays when calling the ‘not fit for purpose’ 101 nonemergency number deterred those targeted from reporting incidents;
Only 3 per cent of people knew about the community trigger – a mechanism that compels the authorities to investigate when three separate incidents are reported within six months;
Victims fear being labelled a ‘grass’ if they report incidents;
Cuts to neighbourhood policing meant fewer opportunities for victims to report problems face to face.
The withering 44-page report warned that repeated failure to tackle the problem had led to an escalation in serious violence – and was often fuelled by county lines gangs. Last week figures showed knife crime had reached record levels, with an average of 112 offences a day. Offences reported to the police in ‘Wild West Britain’ reached a 15-year high with 5.8million offences last year. Baroness Newlove said it seemed implausible that 12 years after the death of her husband in Warrington, Cheshire, she was still raising the issue of antisocial behaviour.
She said: ‘The feedback from victims is that, all too often, they feel they are being persistently targeted by their perpetrators, and yet persistently ignored by those with the power to prevent and intervene.
‘Their experience can be like living a nightmare. Antisocial behaviour is often downplayed
‘Intimidation and drug-dealing’ ‘Surrendered to the gangs’
as a petty, low-level crime.’ She told the Daily Telegraph that charging for 101 calls was fundamentally wrong.
Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Sir Ed Davey said: ‘By slashing community police, ministers have surrendered to the gangs and enabled a surge in antisocial behaviour ruining the lives of people up and down our country.’
A Local Government Association spokesman said: ‘Councils know people look to them to tackle the antisocial behaviour which can make a law-abiding resident’s life hell or blight an entire neighbourhood.
‘It’s a role they take extremely seriously but one which is being made increasingly challenging as a result of losing 60p out of every £1 they had from government to spend on services in the past decade.’
A Government spokesman said it was ‘committed to tackling antisocial behaviour and ensuring victims get the response they deserve’.
Senior politicians are embroiled in a row over plans to increase university tuition fees for Eu students after Brexit.
Proposals are reportedly being drawn up to treat them the same as students from outside Europe for the 2020-21 academic year.
Eu nationals currently pay the same as British citizens, £9,250 a year. But the plans, by Education Secretary Damian Hinds, would see them paying significantly more.
recent research suggests that the average annual fee for a non-Eu student is £13,394, rising to £15,034 for laboratory subjects and £24,169 for clinical disciplines.
The proposed change, revealed in a leaked memo, would apply whether or not there is a Brexit deal.
But Chancellor Philip Hammond and Business Secretary Greg Clark, a former universities minister, are said to be against the policy, which is supported by Brexiteers.
Labour and student representatives also vented fury at the idea and Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s Brexit co-ordinator, wrote to Theresa May warning her not to ‘deprive our youth of opportunities’. He said: ‘Young people must not be the victims of Brexit.’
The Government said the leak was ‘regrettable’ and no final decision has been taken. It also pointed out that those starting courses in 201920 will still be eligible for the same fee rates as UK students.
universities minister Chris Skidmore was criticised by opposition MPs yesterday after an urgent Commons question. But he said Labour’s plan to offer free tuition fees to all UK and EU students was ‘unfunded’ and would ‘discriminate’ against those from non-Eu countries.
Mr Skidmore added: ‘This additional policy now of saying somehow the Labour Party would fund all Eu students coming here to be able to study free of charge without having to pay back their tuition fees would cost at least £445million a year.
‘We’ve talked about magic money trees in the past; we’re talking about a magic money forest it seems when it comes to the Labour Party.’
He said the Government wanted to work on a system that would attract ‘global talent, not just from the Eu’, adding: ‘I wish to tell the House that no decision has yet been made on the continued access to student finance for Eu students.’
The number of undergraduates from Europe has risen by 3.8 per cent since 2017, but could fall if fees go up. The Department for Education said prospective Eu students would be given ‘sufficient notice’ about future arrangements.
Shadow education secretary Angela rayner said: ‘Tens of thousands of Eu students... would see their tuition fees skyrocket if this government withdraws home-fee status from them after Brexit.’
Mrs May has previously clashed with colleagues over her insistence that foreign students should be included in immigration figures.