Gangs: Arrests

(asked on 20th December 2022) - View Source

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many arrests for gang related activity there were in (a) Romford, (b) Havering and (c) nationally in the last five years.


Answered by
Chris Philp Portrait
Chris Philp
Minister of State (Home Office)
This question was answered on 11th January 2023

The Home Office collects and publishes information on arrests but not explicitly on ‘gang-related’ offences as this refers to a wide range of activity – it is not an arrest category in and of itself. We remain committed to tackling the harm caused by criminal gangs, including serious violence and drug related activity.

We are taking a twin-track approach to tackling serious violence, combining tough enforcement to get dangerous weapons off the streets – including through stop and search methods – with programmes that steer young people away from crime.

The Government has made £130m available this year alone (22/23) to tackle serious violence, including £64m for Violence Reduction Units and £30m for our policing programme Grip.

Since 2019, we have allocated the London Violence Reduction Unit (VRU) £33.7m, including £12.6m this financial year (2022/23). The London VRU delivers a range of interventions that support young people at risk of involvement in serious violence and gangs, which requires close work with those local communities affected.

We are also continuing to provide funding to the Metropolitan Police to increase enforcement activity in areas where the most violence occurs, through our Grip hotspot policing programme. The Government has allocated approximately £52.6m over the last three years to the Grip programme in London, including £7.9m for this financial year (2022/23). Through this programme, the Metropolitan Police are delivering data-driven, targeted visible patrols to suppress violence where it is most concentrated.

On tackling drug-related activity, we are investing up to £145m over the next three years to bolster our flagship County Lines Programme, which has already resulted in over 2,900 lines closed, over 8,000 arrests and in the engagement of over 9,500 individuals through safeguarding interventions. As part of this programme, we are funding the Metropolitan Police’s Operation Orochi to support activity to disrupt and close lines originating in London.

We are also funding Catch22 to provide a specialist support and rescue service for under 25’s from the major exporting force areas (London, the West Midlands, Merseyside and Greater Manchester), and their families, who are criminally exploited through county lines, to help them safely reduce and exit their involvement.

In addition, our Young Women and Girls’ Fund is supporting young women and girls impacted by gang related exploitation and abuse. Young Women’s Workers across England and Wales are providing direct support to vulnerable young women to steer them away from harm.

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