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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: 'Gang Culture Is Threat To Us All'
Title:UK: 'Gang Culture Is Threat To Us All'
Published On:2002-09-18
Source:Evening Standard (London, UK)
Fetched On:2008-01-22 01:16:11
'GANG CULTURE IS THREAT TO US ALL'

London faces a generation of youngsters steeped in hard drugs and gang
culture who are starved of decent family values, according to Met
Commissioner Sir John Stevens.

Sir John today spoke of his "trepidation for the future" unless urgent
action is taken by all sections of the community to combat a "values vacuum".

He revealed that 70 per cent of all offenders are under 18 and they commit
72 per cent of robberies, 55 per cent of the street crime and 57 per cent
of thefts.

The young are also targets for crime and were the victims in a quarter of a
million cases last year. Speaking in Westminster to the Evangelical
Alliance, which represents 30 denominations in 3,000 local churches, Sir
John said that in some parts of London the next generation sees crime as
"an unexceptional event".

He said they exhibit a "complete acceptance of drugs in their everyday
lives, adding: "I am talking about the hard and incredibly addictive drugs
of heroin and crack cocaine."

The Commissioner said a lack of stability fuels chaos. "In many parts of
London, the phrase - let alone the experience of 'family life' is unknown.
Single parents, normally mothers, struggle to cope with any number of
children of different ages and with different demands. Devoid of any
familiar-role model, young men particularly but more commonly now young
women, form gangs to give them some identity.

"Is it any wonder then that crime has been on an upward spiral. The youth
gang members of today will be the parents of the gang members of tomorrow.
And that is what we have to stop."

His speech coincided with the launch of the first Church sponsored
advertising campaign to concentrate on social values.

Unveiling the Facevalues initiative, Joel Edwards, the Evangelical
Alliance's general director, said churches are ideally placed to campaign
for the return to decent values. "We want to hold up the values of
responsibility and trust," he said.
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