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    The Second Greatest Risk after Terrorism: London Haunted by Relentless Spate of Stabbings



 

The Second Greatest Risk after Terrorism London Haunted by Relentless Spate of Stabbings

Part 2: Murder in a Bourgeois Suburb

In July, Ben Kinsella, the 16-year-old brother of a TV soap opera star, was murdered in the bourgeois suburb of Sidcup.

Kate Bradley, a social policy analyst at the University of Kent, sees the root of the problem in the British class system. The perpetrators, regardless of whether they're white or black, are have-nots from problem boroughs. "They're young people who have no job and no prospects, who don't know what to do with their free time and who have no hopes for the future," she says.

Often the stabbings are perpetrated by men with low self-confidence, who respond to even the slightest suggestion of an insult by pulling out a knife, often without intending to kill. "The stabbings often involve a fatal combination of excess strength and coincidental provocation," Bradley told SPIEGEL ONLINE. The problem isn't confined solely to the poorer districts of English inner cities. The youths who go out looking for trouble move through the city in search of distraction. But it's mainly poorer people who fear youth gangs -- they're the easiest victims.

Luxury Villas Side by Side With Problem Estates

Social inequality has increased in England in recent years: while the middle and upper classes profited from 12 years of economic growth, the number of young people with no school qualifications or job training increased. There are areas of London where millionaires' villas and poor housing estates are just a street apart. Now, with the British boom years drawing to a close, an embarrassed government is preparing people for a rise in crime.

The opposition Conservative Party sees the teenager murders as clear evidence of its theory that Britain is a "broken society" marked by broken families, alcoholism, violence and ignorance. The crime rate is "out of control," Tory leader David Cameron has been declaring for months, over and over again.

But analyst Kate Bradley sees no reason to panic. "A lot of what we're seeing is by no means new -- it's a phenomenon of big cities," she says.

For decades, about about one-fifth of all violent crime has involved knives. The awareness of knife crime has risen because the fear of violence has increased. But Bradley too is aware of the figures showing that in 2006/2007 a total of 203 males under 30 were murdered, an increase by a quarter since 2002/2003.

The statistics and the human tragedies behind them prompted around 1,000 people to protest against knife crime last month in London's Hyde Park. The march was led by victims' relatives including the grandmother of Shaquille Smith. Her 14-year-old grandson was stabbed to death in September by around a dozen youths in east London. Shaquille had been sitting on a park bench when the group assaulted him.

'We Can't Stop the Supply of Knives'

The march, which was also attended by politicians and celebrities including athlete Dwain Chambers, turned into a demonstration of collective helplessness. "We can't stop the supply of knives," said Mark Simmons, the Scotland Yard officer in charge of combating knife crime. "They're in every kitchen cupboard." The remainder of his speech was drowned out by booing from the crowd.

London Mayor Boris Johnson wants to present new proposals in November for tackling the spate of stabbings. He says he's sad about the 27 deaths this year, that the gangs have to be broken up and that these youths need to be given an education and prospects.

There's nothing new to that insight. But there's little hope of a quick fix. The fear of being stabbed will continue to haunt London's teenagers.

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10/30/2008 from Macadore: Does England now need knife control?

You mean banning handguns didn’t stop the violence? What a shock. It is unfortunate that innocent people in England are paying for the naiveté of the masses. Laws don’t make people safe. Well armed neighbors make you safe. [...] more...

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