Tuesday, September 11, 2007

The people fiddle while the government is being grilled

The police fiddle while children are killed
Minette Marrin August 26, 2007

It is no exaggeration to say that today’s children have been betrayed by today’s adults. The killing of 11-year-old Rhys Jones in Liverpool is a direct consequence of a mass abdication of responsibility by the generations that should have been protecting him – and his murderer, too.

I am not talking about Rhys’s grieving mother and father, who are loving parents of the sort every child should have. I mean the agencies of state, from police officers and local authorities to those in Whitehall and Westminster who have turned their backs on adult obligations and discouraged the rest of us from taking them on.

Although we are the most spied-upon nation in Europe and although we have spent billions on social renewal schemes, we have reached a state in which children and teenagers in big cities live in terror of other children and teenagers and in despair of protection from adults. They carry knives because they are afraid.

They are afraid on their way to and from school and they learn almost nothing when they get there, partly because adults don’t protect them from bullying, thieving and disruption. Teachers have either lost or relinquished their authority and children can expect little or no guidance and protection from them, or from their parents, or from council care, or from the police.

Children know the police cannot protect them from gang leaders and that they would be daft to cooperate as witnesses. I know of two boys who were tortured by a young teenager to stop them giving evidence against him. For many young people in inner cities, there is no alternative to the comparative safety of gang life.

Since January eight young people have died in shootings – six in London, one in Manchester and now one in Liverpool. According to Home Office figures, the total number of young people aged between five and 16 who were murdered, one way or another, has gone down from 44 in 1995 to 20 in 2005-6 (and 40% of these were killed by a parent). However, overall gun killings went up from 49 in 2005-6 to 58 in 2006-7, which is a big leap.

Knife crime has gone up and knife owning is becoming common: 12 teenagers have been stabbed to death since the beginning of this year. The Centre for Crime and Justice Studies at King’s College London found that between 22,000 and 57,000 young people could have been the victims of knife crime in 2004; without better official data it is impossible to know.

It is clear that violent crime among those under 18 has risen for four consecutive years. And it is increasingly clear that, like mass illiteracy and innumeracy, this is at root due to an adult flight from responsibility – a loss of a sense of proper authority, replaced by a misguided pursuit of improper authority.

Take policing, the first, thin line of protection. I find it incredible to learn that there are known gangs in Croxteth, where Rhys was shot (as in Peckham, where Damilola Taylor was stabbed). If the police know of these gangs, why don’t they control them with all possible severity? Why don’t they watch them ceaselessly and remove the ringleaders with Asbos? Why don’t they have police on the beat, as politicians keep promising?

Of course they know of these gangs. Recognising the gravity of gang gun crime, Merseyside police set up a special unit called Matrix two years ago with 200 officers. Why aren’t they patrolling the danger spots aggressively? If 200 officers are not enough, why aren’t there more?

According to locals, the car park where Rhys died had become a meeting place for gangs, yet plans to have police there between 8pm and midnight were withdrawn last May. A camera was proposed for this coming October. It is depressing by comparison that a camera was already in place on a beach in Sussex to catch two girls exposing their breasts, and police were available to arrest and charge them, and accompany them to court last week (though the case was later dropped), while nobody from our busybody state was watching the known troublespot where Rhys died.

There was also police time and presence enough in Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester, this month to arrest a boy who threw a sausage at a man in the street and to charge him with assault, for which he could stand trial at vast expense. A police culture that permits this is the culture of Nero – fiddling with cocktail sausages while the inner cities burn.

The police are not entirely to blame, however. It is not their fault that under politically correct micromanagement from Whitehall, policing has become pen pushing, forcing them off the beat. Alistair McWhirter, a former chief constable of Suffolk, recently made the well-known point that officers spend much of their time doing preposterous amounts of paperwork.

A file for a simple assault case contained 128 pieces of paper and had been handled by more than 50 people before it got to court. Recording an arrest will take up at least a morning of an officer’s time in paperwork. It was irresponsible enough to dream up such a time-wasting procedure; it has been almost criminally irresponsible, after several years of complaint, to continue with it. This is the betrayal of the Whitehall mandarins, who have insisted on this nonsense, in all public services, backed by government.

The failures of the police are only one part of a complex collection of social problems and if society is broken, the police can hardly be expected to fix it. What’s needed is a passionate backlash against irresponsibility and irresponsible, misguided waste and the terrible state sector mentality that promotes both.

It’s this mentality that has produced teachers who can’t or won’t teach, school leavers who are unemployable, students who can’t study, feckless parents, broken homes, police who are obsessed with things that don’t matter, neighbours who dare not stand up to other people’s children, jails overcrowded with the wrong people, idiotic state sector make-work, intrusive quangos imposing idiotic make-work and the divisive follies of multiculturalism and uncontrolled immigration.

Until we begin to stand up against all these things, we can probably expect more senseless killings of children.

Reflection

After yet another untimely passing it is inevitable that an article like this one should be written. As the columnist has mentioned, it is society’s neglect of obligations that has resulted in Britain’s current state of affairs, of which Rhys’ incident was but a small part. The columnist, however, also expressed the view that it is the administration that has promoted such neglect, which I do not agree with. I believe it is the general public that has perpetuated it.

In this age of democracy, the ones with the most power are the voters, not the voted. While this encourages the government to perform in the interests of the people, it also means the government is at the mercy of said people’s whims. As such, the government’s policies are sometimes formed not in the interests of the people, but according to the interests, which as will be illustrated can have dire consequences.

I am no expert on police dealings, but I am sure that they were originally meant to deal with real criminals such as the ones who were (directly or indirectly) responsible for the death of Rhys. They were definitely not meant to go after sausage-throwing adolescents. The reason Whitehall assigns police to such trivial incidents in the community is the public forces them to. Evident here is the public’s ‘abdication of responsibility’; problems that were once solved by one’s self, such as restraint of children, now require police intervention. The people’s uncaring attitude towards their obligations results in them forcing the authorities to cover for their shortcomings.

The police force being swamped with paperwork is another indication of the public’s manipulation. It is Whitehall that implements the system, but it is the public forcing the agency’s hand. The reason so much paperwork has to be done is so that there are no loopholes to exploit. Granted, even without public pressure this should be done, but the public presses for even more detail, even more exact recounting; should a felon escape on a legal technicality, there would be many condemning the current administration and calling for change. To prevent such events, there is no other choice but to increase the amount of paperwork done by the police.

One might argue that the public is also calling for more policemen to be patrolling the streets. Given the resources the authorities would probably implement that too, but as it is they seem to be working at full capacity. I know not why the authorities have chosen paperwork over patrols – I did say I was no expert – but either way they still leave one of the people’s wishes unfulfilled.

This columnist has highlighted a major problem, but has erred in her focus. It is the people who have neglected their obligations, and they have tried to get the state to fulfil them, causing the state to neglect its original tasks, so until the British stop blaming their government and start changing themselves, they indeed can expect more killings like Rhys’.

499 words

1 comment:

RImsKSY said...

The response to the 1st article shows an understanding of the Iraqi situation that the 2nd article does not have. From the Singaporean perspective, would you be able to understand the British situation of increasing crime? Some of the comments you make betray your "outsider" viewpoint.