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More help to tackle knife crime

29 June 2009

More than 150 organisations will receive £2.3m to tackle knife crime and support victims, the Home Secretary announced today.

A total of £2m from the community fund and the youth sector development fund will help organisations who work with young people to prevent them becoming involved in gun, gang and knife crime. Successful bidders include the Croydon Youth Development Trust (new window) and Manchester Young Lives (new window).

In addition, £300k from the victims’ fund will be given to six organisations that support the families and friends of victims of homicide including the Damilola Taylor Trust (new window) and Mothers Against Murder and Aggression (new window).

Statement from the Home Secretary

Alan Johnson said, 'The organisations receiving funding today work tirelessly with communities at the very frontline of the fight against knife crime and demonstrate how at every level we are tackling serious youth violence.

'I am committed to making our streets safer by tackling the minority of young people who commit serious violence through enforcement, tougher sentencing, and also stronger prevention, sending out a very clear message that it will not be tolerated.'

Statement from the co-founder of Mothers Against Murder and Aggression (MAMAA)

Lyn Costello said, 'MAMAA are pleased to have been successful in their application for the victims’ fund. The grant will allow us to reach secondary victims of violent crime, enabling them to access a much needed support system. 
 
'Further to this it will enable continued training of volunteer support workers, in the hope of reaching every family member that needs our service.  It is encouraging to see resources being directed toward services that directly benefit victims of violent crime, a group of people who are in dire need of support and services and we hope to see this commitment to victims continue at government level.'

Funding

The funding is part of the government’s one-year extension of its Tackling Knives Action Programme (TKAP) announced in March. TKAP now works intensively in 15 areas affected by knife crime to reduce the number of knives on the streets, as well as with the British Transport Police.

Latest provisional figures from the NHS show a 22% reduction in admissions for ‘sharp object’ assault for teenagers across England in March 2008 to February 2009 compared with the same period the previous year. 

During the same time periods, in the nine original English TKAP areas there was a 27% fall in teenage stabbing admissions and a corresponding fall of 11% in the non-TKAP areas.

Notes to editors 

The organisations, who all work in the Tackling Knives Action Programme (TKAP) areas, will receive funding from the homicide section of the victims’ fund, the youth sector development fund or the community fund. Community fund grants will be awarded following successful completion of the due diligence process.
 
For details of the successful bidders visit the Crime Reduction website (new window)

The community fund was launched in October 2008 to provide £4.5m of funding over three years to 150 organisations working to divert young people from gun, gang and knife crime in the 13 phase one TKAP areas.
 
The youth sector development fund is run through DCSF and will provide £100m over three years (2008-2011). The Home Office has contributed a one-off £500k to the YSDF, which will be allocated to four organisations working specifically with young people most at risk of becoming involved in gang and knife crime.
 
The victims’ fund was established in 2004/05. It contributes to a wider programme of work to provide victims and witnesses with specialists support to meet their individual needs. In the financial year 09/10 the homicide section of the victims’ fund has £300K available to organisations supporting the friends and family of victims of homicide.

TKAP launched in June 2008 with ten police forces – Metropolitan, Essex, Lancashire, West Yorkshire, Merseyside, West Midlands, Greater Manchester, Nottinghamshire, South Wales and Thames Valley. In November 2008 four more were added as second tier forces - Bedfordshire, Northumbria, South Yorkshire and British Transport Police. In March 2009 it was further extended to include Kent and Hampshire.
 
TKAP is sending out a clear message that if an individual carries a knife, they are more likely to get caught, prosecuted and receive a tough punishment. It has also accelerated educational programmes and diversionary activity to stop young people becoming involved in knife crime in the first place, and reassured the public that we are doing all that we can to keep knives off our streets, with high visibility enforcement activity to back this message up.
 
For more information call Home Office press office on 020 7035 3535.


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