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Mayor joins specialist officers working to tackle violence in London

Created on
25 May 2023

Mayor joins specialist officers working to tackle violence in capital

  • Proactive local police operations working to make London safer. 
  • More than 1,900 arrests and 500 weapons seized by police as part of Operation Denali – with specialist Met teams carrying out high visibility patrols. 
  • Targeted enforcement is working alongside education and early intervention to steer young people away from violent crime. 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, today joined specialist Met officers to see first-hand how the police are tackling violence affecting young people in the capital through enforcement and education. 

Operation Denali sees specialist Met police teams carrying out targeted high visibility patrols and proactive activity in busy high streets and transport hubs, to tackle crime in areas known for high volumes of serious violence and knife carrying. The operation has focused on six boroughs -  Haringey, Enfield, Croydon, Lewisham, Greenwich and Newham – and since it launched in January 2022, police have made more than 1,900 arrests and removed 500 weapons from the streets.  

In Haringey, which the Mayor visited today, homicides have fallen by 40 percent, 49 dangerous weapons have been seized and 196 arrests made since Operation Denali began in January last year.  

The targeted operations are being supported by record investment from the Mayor into positive opportunities for young people in disadvantaged areas, and sit alongside vital work the Met are doing with local communities, education and diversionary programmes. This includes police officers educating young people on the dangers of carrying knives through workshops in schools and youth centres. The Met have nearly 500 officers dedicated to youth engagement and diversion who are working in partnership with London’s schools and local authorities to help divert those most vulnerable and at risk from violence away from a life of crime.  

Today, the Mayor joined a local enforcement operation at Tottenham Hale before meeting with neighbourhood officers, local community youth workers, police youth engagement representatives and Reverend Wood from local community charity, Hope in Haringey, at Tottenham police station to hear about the work they are doing together to educate young people on the dangers of carrying knives. 

Significant progress has been made in tackling violence and homicides in the capital, bucking the national trend, with the number of murders in London last year falling to its lowest since 2014 and teenage murders reducing by more than 50 per cent compared to the previous year.1  

But the Mayor is clear that one life lost to violence is one too many, which is why he set up and continues to fund London’s Violence Reduction Unit to lead an approach that is rooted in prevention and early intervention. This includes investing nearly £6 million in early intervention to drive down school exclusions, funding youth workers in hospitals and in police custody, and helping the Mayor deliver on a flagship manifesto pledge to give every young Londoner in need access to a dedicated mentor by 2024. Over the last two years, the VRU has invested in more than 150,000 positive opportunities for young people. 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “Tackling violent crime and keeping all Londoners safe is my top priority. The Met’s work in areas disproportionately impacted by violence is making a difference with significant drops in violence and murders in these areas and dangerous weapons being removed from our streets.  

“But we know we cannot just arrest our way out of violence and that is why education and prevention work is so vital. Police enforcement is working alongside the early intervention programmes led by my Violence Reduction Unit, which is providing young people in disadvantaged areas with the positive opportunities and mentors they deserve. I urge the Government to follow this lead to funding long term solutions to tackle violence so we can continue to build a safe London for everyone.” 

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Matthew Ward said: “There are no easy answers to tackling violent crime on our streets and no quick fixes to ending the devastation caused to our young people and their families who have been victims of crime.   

“However, there are solutions out there if we’re prepared to listen to the voices of those who are most affected by violence such as those who have lost loved ones; young people who make difficult choices every day;  youth workers, teachers and volunteers who work tirelessly to create alternative opportunities, and police officers who relentlessly pursue the most dangerous offenders and gangs.   

“We’re determined to listen more and work closer with our communities by deploying specialist enforcement teams to protect our most vulnerable boroughs, using dedicated engagement teams to divert our most vulnerable young people away from violence and strengthening our neighbourhood teams to work locally to find long-term solutions.  

“Operation Denali is an example of our commitment to deliver More Trust, Less Crime and High Standards for all Londoners.” 

Director of Hope in Haringey, Reverend John Wood, said: “For almost two decades, we have remained committed to bringing Haringey and Tottenham young people together with MPS officers in safe and neutral spaces for mutual listening and learning. It’s critical for their own security that they have confidence in those that police them, confidence that can only be generated through these types of encounters.  

“Officers also have the chance to learn from these young people and hear their voices so that community safety can be more than a dream, but a reality.  

“In a borough with deep and historic trust issues with the MPS, we remain grateful to the police officers, schools, colleges and youth organisations that participate in our programmes and hope the Mayor and Commissioner will continue to see this work as a priority as they formulate their strategy for reducing youth violence in our City.” 

Police Cadet Co-ordinator in Haringey, PC Chantelle Budny, said: “Engaging with our young people is vital to ensure that we are listening to a variety of different voices. 

“As a Cadet Co-ordinator, I work with young people across the borough to get them involved in different aspects of policing, which allows them to have an understanding of the work we do.  

“It also means that we are able to hear first-hand of any concerns in the local area, and work together to find mutual solutions.”


Notes to editors

[1] Latest MOPAC interpreted Met data shows that there were 14 teenage homicides in 2022, compared to 30 teenage homicides in 2021. Headline crime reduction figures from 2022 show that there were 104 homicides last year in London, lower than any year since 2014 (95). https://www.met.police.uk/sd/stats-and-data/met/homicide-dashboard/.

[2] Operation Denali was launched on 17th January 2022, targeting six London boroughs with a high level of serious violence affecting young people. The four boroughs this work currently covers is Haringey, Croydon, Newham and Lewisham, as these areas continue to have high volumes of serious youth violence and knife carrying. Latest figures show that this work has resulted in 1,914 arrests and 459 weapons being recovered since January 2022.  

Overall results since January 2022 (Source: Met Police) 

Borough  

Arrests 

Weapons seized 

Haringey 

196 

49 

Greenwich 

(Jan - Oct 2022) 

359 

96 

Croydon 

893 

170 

Newham  

247 

67 

Lewisham 

147 

49 

Enfield (June – Oct 2022) 

72 

28 

This intensive proactive police action, known as Operation Denali is led by a dedicated command team made up of officers and staff from British Transport Police, Roads Policing, Met Intel, and Community Engagement along with geographical BCUs.

*Operation Denali has achieved the following results since being set up in January 2022: 

  • 1,914 arrests related those suspected to be involved in violence 
  • 459 weapons have been seized  
  • In Haringey alone – which is one of the four boroughs where the proactive policing operation works 196 arrests have been made and 49 weapons have been seized. 
  • When comparing April 2022-March 2023 with the 12 months previous:
  • Homicides have fallen by 58.3 per cent in the North Borough Command Unit which comprises of Haringey and Enfield
  • Homicides have fallen by 42.9 per cent in Haringey alone. 

[2] The Mayor has invested more than £1billion in policing and is directly funding 1,300 police officers in our town centres and communities, helping to elevate Met officer numbers to their highest and most diverse levels in history. He has also announced plans to fund 500 additional Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) to work in local neighbourhoods disproportionately impacted by crime.

[3] Latest crime stats 

Crimes which have fallen over the Mayoralty (twelve-month period to May 2016 as compared to twelve-month period to April 2023)  

  • Knife crime with injury down 3%.  
  • Knife crime with injury under 25 down 18%. 
  • Gun crime down 14%.   
  • Homicide down 8%.
  • Burglary down 21%.      

Recorded Crime Key Points (12 months to April 2023):

Patterns of crime over recent years have been substantially affected by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and government restrictions on social contact. A number of crime categories remain below pre-pandemic levels, despite increases over the last 12 months. Compared with the 12 months pre-coronavirus pandemic (year ending February 2020), we have seen decreases in a number of crime types, specifically:   

  • Burglary (down -31%)   
  • Robbery (down -26%)   
  • Vehicle offences (-17%)   
  • Knife-enabled crime (-14%)   
  • Gun Crime (-26%)   
  • Homicide (-29%)  

[4] London’s Violence Reduction Unit (VRU): 

  • London’s Violence Reduction Unit (VRU) was set up by the Mayor to lead a partnership approach to tackling violence that is rooted in prevention and early intervention. This year, alongside City Hall, the VRU is investing in positive opportunities for 100,000 young Londoners. 
  • Over the last two years, the VRU has invested in more than 150,000 positive opportunities for young people. This action has correlated with a decline in violent crime. Since it was set up, there has been a 20% reduction in homicides, 30% fall in knife injury of a person under-25, and 17% reduction in robbery. 
  • The VRU is also working to tackle school exclusions through a London inclusion charter and champions the vital role of youth work in violence reduction as well as helping the Mayor deliver on a flagship manifesto pledge to give every young Londoner in need access to a dedicated mentor by 2024. The VRU's community-led MyEnds programme delivered more than 120 interventions that benefitted 3,100 young people, and 3,000 young people have engaged in positive opportunities in the hours after school and at weekends.

[5] Hope in Haringey are a community-based charity who support young people aged between 4-24 with early intervention with counselling, employability mentoring and sports and arts programmes and bringing young people and the police together through structured engagement events. https://hopeinharingey.com/

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