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Felix the Cat
12-15-2005, 02:46 PM
'Booze and blades' push murder rate to new high (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,17129-1930740,00.html)

SCOTLAND’S reputation for casual, drink-fuelled violence was once again underlined last night when official figures showed that the homicide rate for 2004-05 was the highest in almost a decade.

There were 137 victims of homicides — including murders and culpable homicides but excluding death by dangerous driving — in Scotland, 29 more than in 2003-04 and the highest annual total since 1995-96.

In almost three-quarters of the cases, the main accused was known to the victim. As in previous years, a knife or other sharp instrument was the commonest weapon used, accounting for 72 victims, again the highest figure for 10 years. In the 127 cases where the physical and mental state of the alleged killer was known, 45 per cent were drunk, 15 per cent were both drunk and on drugs, and 10 per cent were on drugs.

The figures show that Glasgow remains the murder capital of Scotland, with 55 victims per million of population compared with 22 for the whole of Scotland.

Fifty-five per cent of the homicide cases recorded have so far resulted in a conviction for murder (44 cases) or culpable homicide (30 cases). Eighty-nine per cent of the accused were male.

Cathy Jamieson, Scotland’s Justice Minister, reacting to the statistics, promised moves to tackle public acceptance of violence in some communities. Initiatives already in hand, she said, included expanding Strathclyde Police’s violence reduction unit into a national centre for violence prevention. An Executive-led working group will include leading policymakers and experts on tackling violence.

Ms Jamieson also detailed new laws, already in train, such as tougher penalties for carrying knives and licensing curbs on binge drinking. She said that while the culture of violence was not unique to Scotland, it was a harsh and daily reality for too many people in hard-pressed communities north of the border.

Nearly half of the homicides took place at the weekend where the victim and the accused were both male, aged between 16 and 49, and where the main motive was a fight or quarrel. More than 50 per cent of those accused were acquaintances of the victims and nearly 20 per cent were a partner or relative.

Margaret Mitchell, the Scottish Conservatives’ justice spokeswoman, said that the criminal justice system in Scotland was haemorrhaging because of a lack of police on the streets and the operation of automatic early release. “Some of the homicides are committed by those who should still be in prison,” she said. “I am calling on the Executive to ditch rhetoric, to act now and abolish automatic early release.”

Kenny MacAskill, the SNP’s Shadow Justice Minister, said that what was staggering was that Glasgow’s homicide rate was higher than Belfast’s and more than double the Scotland-wide rate. “The underlying causes of crime need targeted, but there must be no mercy shown to those who use guns, knives or other weapons randomly or indiscriminately,” he said.

In September, a controversial report from the World Health Organisation (WHO) claimed that Scotland had the second highest murder rate in Western Europe. According to the study, Scots were more than three times as likely to be killed as people living in England and Wales and 1½ times more likely than people in Northern Ireland. Only Finland had a worse murder rate, the report claimed.

Another study, this time from the United Nations, said that Scotland was the most violent country in the developed world. It stated that more than 2,000 Scots were attacked every week, almost ten times the official figure, and that Scots were three times more likely to be the victims of violent assault than Americans. That report was criticised by police over its methodology.

The WHO study showed that the murder rate north of the border was 2.33 deaths per 100,000 people, compared with 0.7 in England and Wales, 1.02 in Spain and 0.96 in Italy. France and Norway made it into the top three safest places with murder rates of 0.85 and 0.73. Germany had the lowest murder rate on record, of 0.68.

Count Eustace II
12-15-2005, 03:09 PM
Really!? How much of the homicides are commited by non-white immigrants?
No mention of the report as far as I read.

Milesian
12-15-2005, 03:27 PM
Not sure, but I wouldn't think they are responsible for any great percentage.
The Scots are more than capable by themselves. Hang around Renfrew on a Saturday night and you'll soon discover why ;)

Lenny
12-15-2005, 08:00 PM
knife or other sharp instrument was the commonest weapon usedWhat's with the Scots and their affinity for sharp instruments, even the Glasgow Rangers team takes after some sharp-instrument-wielders (see below) :eek:

"The nickname that Glasgow Rangers fans call themselves is Billy Boys, from an infamous Protestant razor gang in Glasgow's east end in the late 1920's. The name Billy comes from the gang's founder Billy Fullerton"

http://rangersfansvcelticfans.com/intro.html

Felix the Cat
12-17-2005, 11:23 AM
Our drink-sodden culture (http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/52650.html)

If something is bad for people it should be restricted or banned. This statement of the blindingly obvious is being applied in relation to cigarettes (smoking will be banned in all enclosed public places in Scotland next April) and fatty convenience foods and sugary drinks (coming off the menu in school canteens). But it is not so with alcohol, a substance that can cause enormous physical, social and economic damage. A report from NHS Quality Improvement Scotland (QIS), published yesterday, provides a timely festive season reminder of the baleful effects of drink.

Scots are masters and mistresses in the dismal practice of misusing alcohol. The report shows that, between 1996 and 2004, admissions to hospital emergency departments rose by 73% for men and 81% for women with alcoholic liver disease. For chronic liver disease caused by drink, the proportions were 92% for men and 100% (yes, a doubling) for women. There was a 50% increase in the proportion of men admitted with oesophageal varices, a widening of veins in the gullet that can cause heavy bleeding. Even for a nation inured to figures which consistently highlight the health hazards of alcohol, these statistics are shocking.

It is little wonder that QIS described Scotland's drink problem as worsening, or that Audit Scotland warned last week that targets to cut the proportion of people exceeding sensible alcohol consumption limits are unlikely to be met. If anything, the trend appears to be heading in the opposite direction. The consequences for individuals and their families of the levels of heavy and excessive drinking highlighted in the report are not as visible as the impact of anti-social behaviour fuelled by binge drinking but they can be just as harmful.

Making alcohol easier to buy and consume, by extending bar and off-sales hours, appears completely at odds, in light of yesterday's report, with the Scottish Executive's stated aim to promote sensible consumption. The insidious, multi-million pound advertising campaigns funded by the drinks industry and cheap alcohol promotions run at this time of the year by supermarket giants exacerbate the problem.

If ministers are serious about tackling alcohol abuse, they should re-examine the recently-reformed licensing laws to tighten them up where warranted (see above) and tell the drinks industry and supermarkets they also have responsibilities beyond the balance sheet.

QIS has a duty to provide information and pointers to help the NHS improve the quality of care for patients, something of a paradox given the detail in yesterday's report. It paints a picture of accident and emergency (A&E) departments being deluged by patients with chronic conditions caused by drink while dealing with others who are the victims of alcohol-related violence. In addition, medical staff are frequently subjected to physical and verbal abuse by drunks in A&E. The burden has become so great that QIS has, itself, commissioned a report into the problem. That it has had to do so is a terrible indictment on a drink-sodden culture we must no longer tolerate.