Race and Religious Hate Crime Statistics Around Investigations With No Suspect Identified

The breakdown by police forces of the proportion of racially or religiously aggravated offences recorded by officers in the last 12 months to September 2018 which were assigned the outcome of “investigation complete – no suspect identified”, is concerning.

The figures are from police-recorded crime data for England and Wales published by the Home Office and cover five types of offences, all of which have a specific racially or religiously motivated element defined by statute. According to the Home Office, “these racially or religiously aggravated offences are by definition hate crimes”.

The five offences are:

– Racially or religiously aggravated assault with injury

– Racially or religiously aggravated assault without injury

– Racially or religiously aggravated harassment

– Racially or religiously aggravated criminal damage

– Racially or religiously aggravated public fear, alarm or distress

The list reads, from left to right: name of police force, the number of racially or religiously aggravated offences recorded by police in the 12 months to September 2018, the number of these recorded offences assigned the outcome “investigation complete – no suspect identified”, and this number expressed as a percentage.


Speaking about these figures, the Director of Tell MAMA, Iman Atta OBE, said:

“These figures are concerning and may indicate that online investigations do not lead very far because of the difficulty of identifying perpetrators. It may also indicate a lack of evidence in some cases, though what is concerning is that public confidence may well be affected over time and we know that trust in getting outcomes falls. This has a corrosive effect in public confidence in the long term”.


Rankings By Percentage

The list is ranked by percentage, starting with the highest.

Greater Manchester: 5,199 2,385 46%

West Midlands: 3,405 1,496 44%

British Transport Police: 2,619 968 37%

Northumbria: 1,269 421 33%

Sussex: 1,076 338 31%

Lancashire: 1,553 474 31%

Thames Valley: 1,666 484 29%

West Yorkshire: 4,458 1,292 29%

Humberside: 549 151 28%

Gloucestershire: 233 64 27%

Merseyside: 1,613 442 27%

Metropolitan Police: 11,915 3,214 27%

Nottinghamshire: 771 206 27%

South Yorkshire: 1,191 318 27%

South Wales: 924 245 27%

Durham: 369 89 24%

Cleveland: 621 148 24%

Avon and Somerset: 1,634 380 23%

Hertfordshire: 1,006 231 23%

Cambridgeshire: 686 157 23%

Leicestershire: 731 167 23%

Essex: 1,219 276 23%

Suffolk: 434 94 22%

Devon and Cornwall: 815 173 21%

Hampshire: 1,563 328 21%

Wiltshire: 410 84 20%

Surrey: 1,085 222 20%

Northamptonshire: 457 93 20%

Kent: 1,787 361 20%

Cheshire: 792 159 20%

Dorset: 338 67 20%

Dyfed-Powys: 147 29 20%

Warwickshire: 412 78 19%

Norfolk: 411 74 18%

Derbyshire: 510 89 17%

Cumbria: 217 37 17%

Bedfordshire: 607 99 16%

Lincolnshire: 260 41 16%

North Wales: 354 55 16%

Staffordshire: 962 149 15%

Gwent: 373 57 15%

City of London: 109 15 14%

West Mercia: 633 86 14%

North Yorkshire: 269 11 4%

 

The post Race and Religious Hate Crime Statistics Around Investigations With No Suspect Identified appeared first on TELL MAMA.

Categories: Greater Manchester, Hate Crime Stats 2018, Home Office, News, Racially or religiously aggravated

Terror Suspect ‘Claimed To Have Visited Near the Syrian Border as Tourist Excursion’

A terror suspect accused of planning to join Islamic State claimed to have visited a Turkish province bordering Syria as a “tourist excursion” after checking the area out on TripAdvisor, a jury has heard.

Safwaan Mansur, from Birmingham, and Hanzalah Patel, from Leicester, both deny a charge of travelling to Turkey in preparation for terrorist acts.

The men, who spent nine days in jail in Turkey in 2017 after being arrested at an Istanbul hotel, now claim they intended to travel briefly into Syria to gain “bragging rights” on their return.

Prosecutors allege Mansur, 22, of Hampton Road, Aston, and Patel, also 22, of Frederick Road, Leicester, undertook a 24-hour bus journey from Istanbul to near the Syrian border during a previous visit to Turkey in 2016.

Opening the case against the pair at Birmingham Crown Court, prosecutor Simon Davis said they were arrested at Heathrow Airport in 2017 after being reported missing by family members.

During subsequent questioning by police, the court heard, Mansur said he had gone to Turkey’s Hatay province – described in court as a “transit area” for Syria – in 2016 to “have a look” like “lots of other tourists”.

Claiming items including water purifiers and solar chargers were found in the men’s luggage, Mr Davis told the court: “Mr Patel, when interviewed, throughout maintained a no comment stance, as was his right.

“He put forward two prepared statements which were effectively denials of any wrongdoing.”

Jurors were told Mansur told officers items in his luggage were gifts for friends at a mosque in Germany, where he intended to stop off en route to or from Turkey.

Outlining Mansur’s account, Mr Davis told the jury panel: “The people at the mosque liked outdoor pursuits like camping – that was the explanation being given.”

Addressing the reasons given by Mansur for the 2016 visit to Turkey, Mr Davis added: “He said he had checked on TripAdvisor … effectively explaining the trip to Hatay as a long tourist excursion.”

At the conclusion of his opening speech, Mr Davis said jurors would be invited to consider whether the men intended to commit terrorist acts.

Questioning why the former school friends had misled their families and travelled via another country to Turkey, Mr Davis told the jury: “You might want to ask yourselves whether this was an innocent camping holiday or, as the prosecution allege, the two of them engaging in conduct with a view to crossing into Syria with the intention of joining Islamic State.”

The Crown’s opening was followed by a brief speech to the jury by Patel’s barrister, Richard Thomas.

Mr Thomas, making submissions for both defendants, said: “The issue in this case is not, ‘Did they intend to go to Syria?’

“The central issue between the prosecution and the defence is whether they made those efforts to travel to Syria with the intention to commit acts of terrorism.

“They are adamant they had no intention whatsoever of fighting or otherwise committing acts of terrorism.”

Mansur and Patel had “hopelessly naive and idiotic” plans to cross the Turkey-Syria border and return soon after “having seen something of what was happening” to secure bragging rights on their return, Mr Thomas said.

The case continues on Wednesday.

The post Terror Suspect ‘Claimed To Have Visited Near the Syrian Border as Tourist Excursion’ appeared first on Faith Matters.

Categories: Islamic State, News, Safwaan Mansur, Turkey