Knife crime measures an ‘important step forward’ says Llanelli MP

Llanelli MP, Dame Nia Griffith has hailed new knife crime laws as "an important step forward" after knife crime rose by 243% in the Dyfed Powys force area.

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Llanelli MP Nia Griffith outside Parliament as she calls for tougher laws to end the late payment crisis facing small businesses.

Dame Nia Griffith MP hailed the UK Government’s new Crime and Policing Bill as “an important step forward” to reverse the increase in knife crime related incidents that has been seen across the UK, including in Dyfed Powys where it has gone up by a whopping 243% since 2015.

The Bill, currently making its way through Parliament, will give the police new powers to seize, retain and destroy knives held in private, applicable when the police believe the knife will be used in a violent crime.

It also includes strong new rules to prevent online knife sales, including personal liability for senior managers of online platforms who fail to act on illegal content including knives and offensive weapons.

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Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will also introduce a new offence of possession of an offensive weapon with intent to use unlawful violence. It also increases the maximum penalty for offences relating to the sale of offensive weapons.

The Bill will also strengthen age verification requirements for online sale of bladed products. The law will be named after 16-year old Ronan Kanda, stabbed to death in Wolverhampton by a boy who had used his mother’s ID to purchase a 22-inch sword online.

Dame Nia Griffith, Labour MP for Llanelli, said: “This legislation to crack down on knife crime and protect local communities is an important step forward. Far too many young lives are being lost to violence, with families and communities left devastated as a result.  The worrying increase in knife crime since 2015 needs to be properly tackled as a matter of urgency.

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“This Labour UK Government has set an ambitious mission for the country to halve knife crime over the next decade.  Stronger laws and proper enforcement is the start and we must continue to pursue every possible avenue that we can to save young lives.”

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