Weather Tonight: 5°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 9°c Cloudy

News

Teens fuel gun crime surge

By Justin Davenport Crime Correspondent, Evening Standard Last updated at 00:00am on 23.06.05

 Add your view

 

Teenage gunmen are responsible for a huge surge in shootings across London.

Police say they are arresting teenagers with loaded guns as young as 16, while one community leader told the Standard there were now 14-year-olds carrying guns.

The teenage gunmen are suspected of being behind a rise of as much as 146 per cent in gun crime in some London boroughs in the months since April, during which Met Police figures show a 10 per cent rise capital-wide.

One senior detective on Operation Trident, combating armed black drug gangs, said: "The gunmen are getting younger and younger. These kids are less disciplined than older gunmen and more volatile. The terrifying thing is they are getting hold of these guns and they are more willing to use them than older criminals."

One youth, 19-year-old Troy Robinson, was shot dead and two other teenagers were injured in a gun battle involving four young men with guns in Wembley on Sunday night.

Boroughs recording the worst rises include Haringey, up 146 per cent since April to 69 incidents, compared with 28 in the same period last year. In Lambeth, the number of offences rose by 70 per cent from 36 to 61; in Islington, offences were up 93 per cent, from 16 to 31; in Wandsworth, they rose 88 per cent from 17 to 32.

Senior police officers point to a "chaotic" spate of shootingsin April. In Lambeth there were 48, compared with 14 in April last year.

Scotland Yard claims the numbers of incidents are now falling following a blitz against the gunmen, with covert armed operations and raids on suspects.

In a Brixton initiative police seized 11 guns in seven days last week.

Chief Superintendent Martin Bridger, Lambeth's borough commander, has asked people to call him direct with gun crime intelligence. He has already received more than 60 such calls this year.

Mr Bridger said: "The average age of young people in gun crime is around 16,17 or

18. They are getting younger - it is a worrying trend."

Met Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair said on a visit to Lambeth-yesterday that the Met had made mistakes when first tackling Jamaican Yardie gangs 10 years ago. "We did it to the Jamaican community and we failed," he said. He said police were now working with the community to take on the armed gangs, the majority of whom were now British. But one senior community leader said police had failed to recognise the danger and now gang warfare was out of control.

He said: "I know of at least half a dozen gangs in Brixton alone but the Met are saying they do not exist. They have ignored the problem for years and now it's blown up in their face. We have got kids of 14 with guns. I know - I have met them.

"The police just did not take the problem seriously in the first place but now it's spread out of control."


Bookmark and Share
 
 

Reader views (3)

 Add your view

Duck, we controlled it through guns and oppression actually.

And just because we're British you have to go on about the empire?

And do you even KNOW how low gun crime in the UK is compared to the US? Or is one or two incidents shown on CNN enough to convince you that the UK is constantly ablaze with gunfights?

- Fork, Sussex, UK, 19/06/2010 09:41
Report abuse

This is nonsense. We simply do not have gun crime in London. Statistics can me made to prove anything. The true London is as depicted on East Enders and Dixon of Dock Green, not Miami Vice. This city is the safest of any in the world. Strike a Light, mate! Get real!

- Lord Somebodyorother, Hampstead Garden Suburb, UK, 28/10/2009 12:54
Report abuse

That gun ban is really working for you guys isn't it?
How in the Lords name did you ever control the empire?

- The Duck, Ohio USA, 28/10/2009 11:54
Report abuse


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.