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<p>The Government is delivering a range of action to prevent violent crime including
action to tackle knife crime and gang related violence and exploitation.</p><p>Our
work to tackle knife crime includes early intervention and prevention work with key
partners such as the charity Redthread who intervene with young people in hospital
at the ‘teachable moment’. We have awarded £765,000 from a new anti-knife crime community
fund launched in October 2017 to support local communities to tackle knife crime.
47 different projects have been supported through the community fund, and the projects
awarded funding were particularly aimed at helping young people.</p><p>We are also
supporting the Operation Sceptre national week of action by police forces to tackle
knife crime which is taking place in February. Police forces will be undertaking weapon
sweeps, targeted stop and search operations, undertaking test purchasing, encouraging
the use of surrender bins, and carrying out educational activities with young people.</p><p>Through
the Ending Gang Violence and Exploitation (EGVE) programme the Home Office is providing
match funding for local area and strategic reviews in areas experiencing gang related
issues and challenges to test and build local resilience towards tackling these types
of criminal activity, especially county lines. 13 local areas were reviewed in 2016/17
and a further 15 areas are benefiting from these reviews in 2017/18. This supports
our wider work to tackle county lines and especially preventing young people becoming
offenders or victims through county lines drugs dealing with its associated violence
and exploitation. The new Drugs Dealing Telecommunications Restriction Orders (DDTROs)
introduced in December will also help tackle county lines drugs dealing.</p><p>We
have provided funding for 12 Young People’s Advocates to work directly with gang-affected
women and girls. We have also provided funding in 2017/18 of over £280,000 to 16 local
EGVE projects, including projects delivering gang, knife and county lines awareness
training for young people, practitioners and foster carers, community sports and arts
projects and mentoring programmes.</p><p>An action plan to tackle the use of acid
and other corrosives in violent attacks was announced by the Home Secretary in July
2017. This included actions to improve the policing response and also the introduction
of a voluntary set of commitments for retailers to not sell certain particularly harmful
corrosive substances to under 18s. The agreement with retailers was introduced earlier
this month.</p><p>The Government will be publishing a Serious Violence Strategy shortly.</p>
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