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Gun crime claims three young lives in London
Cameron pontificates, Blair shrugs
By Julie Hyland
24 February 2007
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Despite the very best efforts of the powers that be, Britain
is not yet Americaat least where gun crime is concerned.
All the more tragic then were the shooting deaths of three boys
in London within a matter of days.
Billy Cox, aged 15, was gunned down in his bedroom in Clapham,
south London, on February 14, Valentines Day. His 13-year-old
sister, Elizabeth, discovered him moments after the shooting but
it was too late to save him.
The motives for Billys murder are still unknown. As always,
there is much speculationranging from a trivial text-message
row to a drugs feud.
Nor is it clear if his death is related to earlier shootings
involving young boys, also in south London. On February 6, 15-year-old
Michael Dosunmu was shot in his bedroom in Peckham, just two days
after his birthday. His sister was also present when two intruders
forced their way into the home and shot Michael, who died of his
injuries at Kings College Hospital.
It is thought that Michaeldescribed as church-going and
industriouswas the victim of mistaken identity. Whether
that mistake was connected to the shooting of 16-year-old James
Andre Smartt-Ford is also the subject of speculation. James was
shot several times at point-blank range at an ice-rink in Streatham
on February 3.
The absence of concrete facts did not deter politicians and
the media, however, who responded to the shootings with a mix
of prejudice, hypocrisy and raw political propaganda.
Before any investigation had been completed, Conservative leader
David Cameron proclaimed that he knew what lay behind them. The
killings, he opined, were the product of family breakdown.
Cameron told GMTV, When you look at the people caught
up in these events, what you see is a complete absence in many
cases of fathers, and a complete presence of family breakdown
... lets start the big culture change of encouraging responsibility
in our country.
We urgently need to reform the law, and the rules around
child maintenance, to compel men to stand by their families,
he went on, suggesting income-tax breaks for married couples.
In reality, it appears that none of the victimsthose
caught up in these eventscame from broken
families. And of their parents, most were working.
None of this matters one iota to a Tory Party that is involved
in a major effort to repackage its right-wing social policies
as caring and compassionate. Like Margaret Thatcher before, it
is fixated on single parents, and even step-families, as the root
of all societys problems.
The non-traditional family now accounts for a large
portion of all families in the UK. In Tory jargon this development
is symptomatic of a working class that no longer tugs its forelock
before tradition and religious dictate.
More immediately, complaints about family breakdown have the
vital purpose of transforming social problems into manifestations
of individual failure and irresponsibility, under conditions in
which social inequality has reached proportions not seen since
the Edwardian era.
Thus Cameron managed to speak about a crime that he claimed
was symptomatic of the state of society, without ever dealing
with that society. There was no reference to the reality of life
facing many young people in inner-city areas, much less to poverty
or deprivation. Again this was with good cause. In its recent
policy statement, Breakdown Britain, the Tories proposed
that the traditional family must be bolstered if it is to substitute
for vital public services which it intends to cut still further.
What need for elderly provision, nursery care or social welfare
when a grandparent, mother or elder sibling can be made to do
the job?
For rank hypocrisy, however, Prime Minister Tony Blair stole
the day. Responding angrily to Camerons speech, he insisted
that the death of young Billy Cox was not a metaphor for
the state of British society, still less for the state of British
youth today.
Blair has not always been so averse to crude shroud waving.
Some 15 years ago, the up and coming Labour leader was only too
willing to utilize a childs tragic death to underscore his
partys shift to the right and thereby his own viability
as future prime minister.
In February 1992, two-year-old James Bulger was murdered by
two 10-year-old boys in Liverpool. In a speech just days later,
Blairthen Labours home affairs spokesmansaid
that the murder was symptomatic of the state of the nation. The
news bulletins of the past week have been like hammer blows struck
against the sleeping conscience of the country, he said,
calling for people to wake up and look unflinchingly at
what we see.
In fact, it was not the crime so much as the punishment which
spoke volumes about British society. Killings by children remain
extremely rare. But the fact that Jamess killers came from
dysfunctional families in an impoverished part of the country
was consciously used by Blair and the political elite to paint
a Lord of the Flies scenario in which feral children
from Britains underclass ran amok in the inner-cities.
There could be no reasoning with such creatures, much less
understanding them, went the official mantra. Denunciations of
the mollycoddling welfare state were accompanied by
the denigration of a mollycoddling legal justice system.
Under the banner of balancing rights with responsibilities,
draconian law-and-order measures were to be introduced, directed
specifically against the young. Just to reinforce the point, in
scenes that would not have been out of place in one of Dickenss
novels, James killers were tried as adults in the Old Baileythe
dock specially raised so that their heads might be seen above
it.
Today, however, Blair cannot tolerate any examination of the
state of the society that his government has presided over for
10 years. For it would show that the situation facing working
families and especially the young is even more precarious than
under the Tories, as Labour has systematically stepped up the
redistribution of wealth away from the working class to the super-rich.
Just one day after Billy Cox was killed, the Unicef organization
produced its report on the situation facing young people in the
wealthiest 21 OECD countries. Drawing a direct link between widening
levels of social inequality in Britain and America, and the extremely
high levels of risk-taking behaviour such as substance abuse,
the report concluded that the US and the UK were the worst places
to be young.
Launching the report, Professor Jonathan Bradshaw, described
a dog-eat-dog attitude that prevails as an outcome
of a society which is very unequal, with high levels of
poverty.
The Unicef findings were backed up by a report in the Independent
on Sunday at the weekend which revealed that hospital admissions
for children with alcohol-related problems had increased exponentially,
with a 25 percent rise in one year amongst girls under the age
of 16.
Hospital admissions for under-18s are at their highest
since records began, and the average amount children are drinking
every week has doubled since 1990, it reported. Professor
Mark Bellis, director of the Centre for Public Health at Liverpool
John Moores University, said, The numbers of underage drinkers
in hospital for alcohol-related conditions are substantial but
it is only the tip of the iceberg. Many more children are admitted
for problems not recorded as alcohol. The admissions include everything
from being involved in violence to teenage pregnancies.
According to the statistics, levels of gun crime remain fairly
constant and in London have even fallen. But in amongst this,
the numbers of teenagers involved with guns have increased. Could
there be any relationship between these figures and a dog-eat-dog
atmosphere? Would not gun crime figure as the epitome of risk-taking
behaviour?
Of course, no answer was forthcoming from either Cameron or
Blair. On the questions that really matter, their mouths were
firmly sealed.
In advance of its gun-crime summit with police on Thursday,
Blair had pledged that new measures under consideration included
longer jail sentences for people aged from 17 to 21 who are caught
with firearms. It was soon pointed out to Blair that Labour had
already introduced such legislation three years ago. And as the
singer Mica Paris, whose brother Jason was killed six years ago
in a shooting, said, a five-year sentence would solve nothing.
This is a much, much bigger problem than just adding years
to someones life if they go to jail, she said.
The prison population in England and Wales rose from 60,000
in 1997 to 80,000 today143 imprisoned for every 100,000
people. The conviction rate for children doubled between 1992
and 2000. Writing in the Guardian, Jon Fayle, formerly
of the Youth Justice Board, explained, Compared with most
countries in Europe, we lock up a high number of children. For
every 100,000 children in the population, we lock up 23. The equivalent
figure in France is six, in Spain it is two, and in Finland it
is just 0.2. This was not primarily the result of any increased
lawlessness amongst the young, he continued, but political
mood music which had placed law-and-order measures at the
top of the agenda.
The rate of imprisonment matters especially when neighbours
of Billy Cox complain that the readiness to commit young people
to prison not only deprives them of work prospects but is also
a significant factor in introducing them to a gun culture in the
first place.
But none of the official parties have any response to the social
problems created by their big business agendas other than greater
repression. Indeed, the only initiatives coming from
the governments gun-summit were more police powers.
See Also:
Experts describe UK as worlds
first onshore tax haven
[6 January 2007]
Britain: an acute
social divide in housing
[13 December 2006]
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