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Wednesday, 3 July, 2002, 09:33 GMT 10:33 UK
Police chiefs face weekly checks
The government is cracking down on street crime
Chief constables in 10 areas with the worst street crime records have been ordered to report to specially-appointed government ministers, it has emerged.
The briefings on what progress is being made against muggings and street violence are sent to 10 ministers who make up the Street Crime Action Group, according to the Times newspaper. Statistics show 80% of street crime is committed in the 10 areas involved in the group - launched by Home Secretary David Blunkett in February - with more than 78,000 street robberies reported last year.
However, the Home Office insists the initiative is not designed to take operational control away from the individual forces. Prime Minister Tony Blair has chaired several meetings of the action group, which was set up to target the steep rise in muggings and street violence. Mr Letwin told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "David Blunkett has been trying to legislate to give himself powers to nationalise the police forces in the Police Reform Bill, and we have been trying to block that, so far successfully, in the Lords. "And what this indicates is that the government has been trying to find informal means of doing rather similar things. "And the danger of that is a huge centralised bureaucracy running the police forces rather inefficiently and with some danger in the long run of compromising the tradition of complete operational and political independence of the police forces." Weekly reports However, a Home Office spokesman said: "Operational independence remains with the police, absolutely. There is no question about that. "It was agreed early on and collectively at the Street Crime Action Group meetings, at which the police are represented, that forces would submit weekly reports."
He added: "The government has huge powers and influence over the police already. "But we do not have one national police force. We will not agree to one - by the front door or by the back door." Each of the ministers involved, from John Denham to Lord Falconer in the Home Office, and others in housing, art, education and health, has visited the areas involved. Their discussions with chief constables have centred on different ways of trying to cut street crime. The action group has previously floated ideas such as docking child benefit from the parents of truants and the stationing of police officers at school gates at the end of the school day. A scheme introduced in New York where police chiefs made regular reports on crime patterns led to a dramatic fall in street crime.
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