MPA welcomes drop in recorded crime but says more needs to be
done to reduce street robbery and violence in London
48/01
18 July 2001
Chair of the Metropolitan Police Authority, Toby Harris, today
welcomed the fall in total offences in London but said more needed
to be done to reduce robbery and violence and increase detection
rates.
Speaking following the publication of Home Office figures for
recorded crime in England and Wales for the 12 month period to
March, he said:
"London has seen a fall in total offences similar to England
and Wales, but records nearly half of all robberies reported in
Britain, up by almost 14 per cent in the capital over the previous
year. Detection rates are also below the national average.
"Much is being done to tackle these problems already, such as
the successful Operation Trident which targets gun crime, with 300
arrests and 90 firearms recovered to date, for example.
"But the MPA will continue to conduct rigorous and in-depth
interrogations of police data and performance to determine what
works, what doesn't and spread good practice.
"We can't achieve significant changes overnight, but we must
take action to prevent certain crimes continuing to rise,
especially those that concern Londoners most, such as street
robbery, violence, hate crime and autocrime.
"A proactive and decisive police authority which works closely
with their police service as a critical friend, scrutinising,
advising and where necessary, holding them to account for their
actions or lack of action is an effective way to drive up police
performance and efficiency. Only a police authority which
understands in detail how the police service operates within the
local context can carry out this important role properly.
"To help drive down crime, the MPA is already:
- working in partnership with boroughs, borough commanders and
community consultative groups to support crime and disorder
reduction initiatives;
- setting targets in our policing plan for 2001/02 for the
Metropolitan Police Service to reduce street crime (including
robbery), rape, homicide, burglary and autocrime;
- rigorously scrutinising and interrogating police data,
comparing the performance of borough against borough via our
professional standards and performance monitoring committee;
- receiving detailed briefings on specific police initiatives,
such as Operation Strongbox aimed at reducing volume crime, and
Operation Crackdown which tackles drug-related offences;
- carrying out In-depth examinations of MPS performance in
specific areas, such as rape investigation and victim care;
- involved in Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary
inspections of boroughs;
- participating in the Met's own borough inspection programme;
- continuing with close community involvement via consultation;
- working with the Met and others to reduce youth crime through a
variety of borough-based initiatives.
"We are already doing much in partnership with the police and
others to reduce crime and the fear of crime. But until Londoners
feel truly safe on our streets, then our vital work goes on."
Notes to editors
The Home Office report, Recorded Crime Statistics England and
Wales 12 Months to March 2001, is published today.
Further media information
For further information, please contact the
MPA press office.