Home Secretary to launch Serious Violence Strategy
Home Secretary Amber Rudd today sets out a multi-million pound
commitment to steering young people away from crime and tackling
violent drug-dealing gangs through the government’s first Serious
Violence Strategy. Commissioned by the Home Secretary and
backed with £40m of Home Office funding, it marks a major shift in
the government’s response to knife crime and gun crime....Request free trial
Home Secretary Amber Rudd today sets out a multi-million pound commitment to steering young people away from crime and tackling violent drug-dealing gangs through the government’s first Serious Violence Strategy.
Commissioned by the Home Secretary and backed with £40m
of Home Office funding, it marks a major shift in the
government’s response to knife crime and gun crime.
It strikes a balance between prevention and robust law enforcement with a new £11m Early Intervention Youth Fund for community projects to help young people live lives free from violence. The strategy identifies the changing drugs market – in particular the devastating impact of crack cocaine - as a key driver of the violence harming our communities and announces a range of powerful actions to tackle the issue of “county lines” and its implications for drugs, violence and exploitation of vulnerable people. That includes £3.6m to establish a new National County Lines Coordination Centre. The Home Secretary will launch the Serious Violence Strategy at an event in London today to an audience of community groups, public sector partners and industry representatives, including organisations and charities she has met in recent weeks. She will also announce that she will lead a new Serious Violence Taskforce which will bring together the voluntary sector, local Government, police and other key sectors to ensure the strategy is delivered effectively. In her speech she is expected to say:
The strategy stresses the importance of early intervention to tackle the root causes of serious violence and steer young people away from crime in the first place, whilst ensuring the police continue to have the tools and support they need to tackle violent crime. It states that about half the rise in robbery, knife and gun crime is due to improvements in police recording. For the remainder, drug-related cases seem to be an important driver. Between 2014-15 and 2016-17, homicides where either the victim or suspect were known to be involved in using or dealing illicit drugs increased from 50% to 57%. Crack cocaine markets have strong links to serious violence and evidence suggests crack use is rising in England and Wales due to a mix of supply and demand factors. The strategy sets out how drug-market violence may also be facilitated and spread by social media, with a small minority of people using social media to glamorise gang or drug-selling life, taunt rivals and normalise weapons-carrying. The Home Secretary will go on to say:
In addition to the £40m of Home Office funding to deliver the strategy in the next two years, it references:
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