Britain Becomes West's Crime
Capital: UN Research
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200207/15/eng20020715_99700.shtml
England and Wales now top the Western world's
crime league, the British daily Independent reported on Sunday citing
a United Nations research.
England and Wales now top the Western world's
crime league, the British daily Independent reported on Sunday citing
a United Nations research.
A study by the UN Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute
revealed that people in England and Wales experience more crimes per
head than people in 17 other developed countries surveyed, the
newspaper said.
Researchers found that nearly 55 crimes are committed per 100 people
in England and Wales compared with an average of 35 per cent in other
industrialized countries.
England and Wales also have the worst record for "very serious"
offenses, registering 18 such crimes for every 100 inhabitants,
followed by
Australia with 16.
LUFA Notes: So much for all the gun
control and gun bans in England and Australia. Nice to see how well
those countries are doing with crime control.
"Contact crime", defined as robbery, sexual assault and assault with
force, was second highest in England and Wales - 3.6 per cent of those
surveyed, comparing with 1.9 per cent in the US.
The UN study analyzed Home Office crime statistics for England and
Wales and conducted telephone interviews with crime victims in the 17
countries surveyed, including the
United States,
Japan,
France and
Spain,
News of the survey comes days after the Government published its
long-awaited national crime figures, which showed the first increase
in burglaries and thefts for 10 years.
The findings were expected to cause further embarrassment to British
Prime Minister Tony Blair who has pledged to have street crime under
control by September.
This week, the Home Office will publish its White Paper outlining
radical reform of the criminal justice system, in part to curb
spiraling street crime and to punish more offenders. Government
sources confirmed that the reforms will also include empowering judges
to tell rape-trial jurors about a defendant's previous convictions.
A record 108,178 street robberies last year prompted the Metropolitan
Police Federation to demand an extra 12,000 officers for London alone.
The US, by contrast, has managed to reduce its crime rates, despite
its reputation for street robberies and shootings.