Scottish Daily Mail

Only the complacent SNP thinks our streets are really any safer

-

WITH schools in the grip of a discipline crisis, Scotland’s Violence Reduction Unit has some much-needed guidance for teachers.

‘Start the day with meditation, everybody, teachers and the pupils,’ it advises, because it will help everyone ‘emotionall­y regulate’.

‘If the emotions are free,’ the unit’s James docherty counselled on Twitter, ‘attainment will take care of itself’ – the kind of chilled-out guidance a Sixties hippy would have been proud to offer.

doubtless there is some wisdom in his words, but in schools where headteache­rs are effectivel­y barred from excluding unruly pupils, you might wonder if meditation would be deemed a slightly inadequate response.

Part of Police Scotland, the unit, known as the VRU, has played a vital role in tackling youth gang culture, particular­ly in the West of Scotland.

The official consensus is that, over the past decade or so, the country has effectivel­y shed its unwanted reputation as a violent nation.

But there are worrying indication­s that much of that valuable work risks being undone, as figures begin to show regular increases in crimes of violence.

There have been startling rises in certain categories and marked localised surges which – taken together – undermine the narrative, repeatedly peddled by the SNP, that Scotland is ‘safer’ on its watch.

Challenged

Opposition parties last month challenged Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf over a 14 per cent rise in violent crime in only two years and accused ministers of becoming ‘dangerousl­y complacent’ following previous declines in recorded offences.

The number of non-sexual crimes of violence recorded by Police Scotland in April-June compared with the same quarter last year rose by 7.1 per cent, from 1,914 to 2,050.

Murders increased from ten to 13, while robberies were up 12.5 per cent, from 399 to 449.

But in Renfrewshi­re and Inverclyde, robberies rose by 84 per cent. In Fife – where Police Scotland says ‘the majority of crimes have an element of drugs involved’ – they increased by 61.5 per cent.

At the same time, the detection rate for violent crime across Scotland has fallen from 79.5 per cent to 69.7 per cent in the past year.

This means fewer violent offenders are being brought to justice, while a spate of gangland executions is a reminder that organised crime is thriving, despite concerted efforts to ‘disrupt’ its activities.

These trends indicate problems many had hoped had been eradicated are beginning to re-establish themselves – and it may take more than meditation and ‘emotional regulation’ to curb them.

Yet the steady flow of rhetoric about the fall in violent crime from top brass and senior SNP politician­s continues.

At a recent meeting of the Scottish Police Authority, none of the board members challenged Chief Constable Iain Livingston­e about the latest figures, which also showed a rise in overall crime.

Last year, an investigat­ion by the Mail revealed nearly half of housebreak­ers and violent thugs had been spared jail since the SNP came to power, as the party focused on emptying prisons in favour of electronic tagging and (supposedly) revamped community service.

While some experts tasked with violence reduction argue that ‘austerity’ is driving the increase in robberies, there is concern among the rank-andfile that a looming decline in manpower caused by the financial squeeze will hit frontline policing – and violence may rise further.

The Scottish Police Federation has warned that beat patrols are virtually extinct, as Police Scotland switches its emphasis to heavy social media coverage of officers’ presence at community events, including funfairs and galas. Fine in principle, but infuriatin­g for anyone who has been told there are no officers available to respond when they report a crime.

There is copious evidence on social media to demonstrat­e officers are indeed available – but often they’re dressed as penguins or fishing for plastic ducks…

A familiar line of argument from police chiefs and ministers is that statistica­l increases in the reporting of some crime can be positive because it suggests higher levels of public confidence in the ability of police to catch criminals.

Yet the Scottish Government has admitted the majority of crime is not even reported to the force – including 44 per cent of violent offences – so perhaps confidence isn’t quite as high as police chiefs like to assume.

Similar theories are routinely deployed when police data shows rising sexual crime (as it generally does), including a 20 per cent increase in rapes and attempted rapes in the past year, from 1,878 to 2,255. Sexual assaults are up by 13 per cent, from 4,281 to 4,826.

Victims

The figures for rape and attempted rape show 54.6 per cent of cases were ‘cleared up’ in 2017-18 – the lowest on record and down from 59.6 per cent in 2016-17.

This means more and more sex offenders are avoiding justice – as growing numbers of alleged victims tell police about their ordeals.

For some time, police tried to explain these increases as a product of the ‘Savile effect’, as victims of historical sexual crime came forward in the wake of the revelation­s about the paedophile dJ.

But six years after the allegation­s against Savile came to light, this hypothesis is less convincing.

Police insist a large proportion of rapes are historical – about 40 per cent – but this means only that they were reported more than a year after they were said to have occurred, so it’s not always the case that these allegation­s are decades-old.

Rape Crisis Scotland has said the rise in rape reports is ‘worrying’ and that ‘while it may be some of this increase is due to more confidence to report what has happened, it is also possible we are seeing increasing levels of sexual crime taking place’.

There is no doubt police are devoting more resources to the investigat­ion of allegation­s of sexual crime dating back several decades, partly as a result of the ongoing statutory inquiry into institutio­nal child abuse.

But the familiar and much repeated assertion that growth in the reporting of sexual offending demonstrat­es greater public confidence in the way the force handles the investigat­ion of sex crimes – and that much of it is in any event historical – is beginning to look a little threadbare.

Complacenc­y over crime has begun to take root because of political pressure to ensure the mantra that Scotland is safer under the SNP – dutifully trotted out by Mr Yousaf, as it was by his predecesso­r Michael Matheson – remains viable.

But the public aren’t so easily conned – and there will be a heavy price for the SNP to pay if it cannot halt the rise in violent and sexual crime and ensure those responsibl­e face tough justice.

Grant GRAHAM

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom