More than 10,000 volunteers patrol streets spreading religious messages, and police say they have helped reduce crime. |
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London,
United Kingdom - With her blue
jacket and baseball cap - and armed with a prayer as well as a walkie-talkie
- Audrey Golding is on her first patrol with London's growing army of
"Street Pastors" carrying out what she sees as God's mission on
Britain's boozy byways.
She is one of at least 11,000 volunteers in the Christian organisation who patrol towns and cities across the country at weekends to bring practical help - and, at times, a spiritual message - to young people out partying late at night. "When my oldest son decided that he was an atheist I was so angry that I prayed for angels," says Golding, a former teacher. "But then I realised, we can be angels. That is why I am here."
Experts believe
that the type of faith-based citizen participation that Golding embodies is
making a significant contribution to a dramatic fall in rates of violent
crime in the UK, as part of a wider strategy of "smart" policing.
A spokesman for
the Association of Chief Police Officers, representing forces throughout the
UK, said: "Volunteer roles continue to support the police across the
country and help us in delivering a better service to the public. Faith based
citizen patrols, such as Street Pastors, have made a significant difference
by helping people and keeping them safe."
Crime
decline
Two landmark
reports have indicated rates of murder and violence are falling more rapidly
in Britain than anywhere else in Western Europe, and identified a major
decline in the number of people hospitalised after violent incidents.
The figures come
despite falling numbers of police officers and amid tough economic times -
prompting a search for explanations that has focused on partnerships between
the police and community groups such as the faith-based Street Pastors.
In its first
"United Kingdom Peace Index", the New York-based Institute for
Economics and Peace (IEP) measured levels of violent crime between 2003 and
2012.
Its UK report is an offshoot of its well-established Global Peace Index that measures levels of "peacefulness" in societies according to variables such as levels of violent crime, homicides and violent demonstrations - as well as perceptions of criminality. The institute identified a "substantial and sustained reduction in direct violence in the UK", with a homicide rate that has halved since 2003 and a reduction from 1,255 to 933 in violent crimes per 100,000 people.
Although the UK
homicide rate is now at its lowest level since 1978, violent assault in
Britain remains much higher than the OECD average and it is still one the
least peaceful countries in Europe, ranking behind Ireland, Spain, Portugal,
Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Poland.
The institute
argues that declining levels of violent crime can yield a substantial
economic dividend: the cost of dealing with violence in the UK and lost
production resulting from it amounts to £12bn ($19.3bn) annually - the
equivalent of nearly eight per cent of GDP.
Economic
benefits
"The UKPI clearly indicates that the UK has become substantially more peaceful in the past decade, but it also shows that further improvements in peace would generate billions of pounds in extra economic activity," Steve Killelea, founder and executive chairman of IEP, told Al Jazeera. In a separate study, Cardiff University reported that the number of people treated in hospital in England and Wales after violent incidents dropped by 14 percent in 2012 from the year previous.
"These
findings are important because they show that England and Wales became safer,
that people can be less worried about being harmed, and that the cost of
violence to the National Health Service and to communities is coming
down," said Professor Jonathan Shepherd, director of the university's
Violence and Society Research Group.
The IEP believes
that a substantial improvement in police practices is among the most likely
explanations for declining violence - even though budget cuts have slashed
police numbers in the UK by 5.5 percent over the past five years.
Commentators
also point to an ageing population, the introduction of a minimum wage,
declining alcohol use - and the growing popularity of community patrols by
organisations such as the Street Pastors.
Launched by the
Ascension Trust, an inter-denominational Christian organisation that works
with communities to address poverty and crime, Street Pastor groups
originated in a gun-crime initiative targeting violent hotspots in London and
Manchester.
Their numbers have swelled since 2003, and more than 11,000 trained volunteers in 300 teams around the UK now mount night-time patrols in town centres at weekends. The Street Pastors offer advice and help when they encounter problems of drunkenness, confrontation and homelessness. One of the first Street Pastor groups was launched in Sutton, south London - a magnet for up to 2,000 young people drawn to its 16 town-centre bars and nightclubs on a Saturday evening - where patrols are led by Mark Tomlinson and a team of volunteers from local churches that now includes Audrey.
On
patrol
The Pastors patrol in pairs talking to revellers, maintaining contacts with bar staff, and helping drunken or troubled youths. At 85, their oldest member, Pat Fletcher, says she has never felt vulnerable in her five years patrolling. They hand out lollipops, sandals for young women who have removed their high-heeled shoes, and "spikies" - small, plastic devices that allow people to prevent bottled drinks being “spiked” maliciously with spirits.
As a religiously
motivated group, at times the Street Pastors will even openly pray in the
street with or for a troubled youth when appropriate.
Such methods may
at first sight seem naive in the gritty urban jungle that areas of London
become at night-time - but experience shows they can yield concrete benefits
where high alcohol consumption heightens the potential for violent crime.
As Street Pastor Hazel Jessop points out: "You try having an argument with a lollipop in your mouth." Group members carry walkie-talkies linked to police radio control, working closely with officers and pub and club security staff - and alerting them to potential problems. Those can range from encountering blind-drunk youths unconscious on the sidewalk, stumbling across fights or victims of mugging, and finding homeless people sleeping rough.
"I am
convinced that we avert some of the crime and violence," said Tomlinson,
who has been patrolling for seven years. "The most important thing we
can do is to maintain a presence, to be out there - and that makes a real
difference."
Other locals
agree. Police officers on duty and club door staff speak in glowing terms of
the Street Pastors' work.
"These guys
are amazing: you have people sitting around blind-drunk and they will always
come and talk to them and encourage them to go home," said Lawrence
Dickson, the burly head doorman of Sutton's Wonderland nightclub.
The work of the Street Pastors highlights a strong emphasis on collaboration employed by local authorities such as the police through the so-called "Safer Sutton Partnership". In what is sometimes referred to as "joined-up" policing, officers consult regularly with the Pastors, bar owners and security guards - and respond rapidly to de-escalate signs of trouble. Such tactics are having an impact: although levels of violent crime oscillate, recorded offences of violence against the person in Sutton fell from 3,214 in 2003-04 to 2,569 in 2012-13 - a drop of 20 per cent. A similar organisation that originated in the north of England, named "Street Angels", is also expanding rapidly, and has compiled evidence that the work of such initiatives makes a major contribution to the night-time economy.
Smart
policing
Evaluations conducted in town centres from Stockton-on-Tees to Cleethorpes associate the Angels with large reductions in levels of crime and the fear of it. "The fact that a lot of towns report a significant reduction in crime from the day that Street Angels starts means there's obviously some connection with the volunteer street patrols," said Street Angels founder Paul Blakey. Experts believe the emphasis placed by authorities on partnership between emergency services, volunteers and other agencies - and better use by the police of technology - are key factors behind the fall in violent crime.
Studies suggest
that, by maximising the use of mediation, organisations such as the Street
Angels reduce the need for more heavy-handed "response" policing.
Max Chambers,
head of crime and justice at the Policy Exchange think tank that advised on
the IEP’s report, says the UK evidence demonstrates that police numbers are
less important than"“smart policing and preventative policies".
Critics have
attacked at least one aspect of this approach, arguing that a large increase
in the use of "community resolutions" - by which, last year, more
than 10,000 serious violent crimes were dealt with through an apology or
compensation instead of a prosecution - are a quick way of clearing up cases
and are bad for justice.
But community officials and police officers are in no doubt about the role played by the Street Pastors and Angels.
At a recent
meeting with the Sutton Street Pastors, Chief Inspector Nick Collins, the
local police partnership officer, told those assembled: "You being out
inspires confidence in people. You make the street feel safer, and eventually
that will make it safer."
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Aljazeera.
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Friday, 10 May 2013
UK street preachers spread anti-crime gospel
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