My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

London police in an institutionally culpable homicide

posted Thursday, 24 August 2006

Crime headlines as I left


I leave London saddened and hardly elated by news that arrived on the Evening Standard paper.


You will recall that last week I noticed within a 5-minute walk, signs seeking information about grievous crimes that created a sense of insecurity about the city from the first night.


So, I left, I got a copy of the Evening Standard and the front page read, “Father is killed by teenage gun gang”. One could almost dismiss this as a typical drug dispute situation, but the detail reveals a deeper malaise in society that I am not sure is easy to address.


Standing up to be killed?


The father killed was a 22-year-old young man father of a 3-year old son and he got killed doing what we as a society has lost sight of and stopped doing – standing up to anti-social miscreants who menace our peace, property and lives.


Hardly 7 months before, a group of kids were throwing stones at his car, he came of his house and confronted the gang; he got stabbed in the neck that the stabbing just missed his jugular vein.


A rotten police for a rotting society


The police took calls from his fiancée every day for 5 weeks and still did not end up taking a statement from her, and after the police were supplied with the details of the perpetrators and so on, but no one got prosecuted for the crime that the kids deemed themselves untouchable.


The question is how kids end up with knives that they can be such a danger to society having had parents whose dereliction of parental responsibility has lead to the creation of these treacherous monsters who because they are under 18 never see enough of the toughness of the law when they offend.


The news we now have is, this very young family was terrorised since then to the most recent situation where the young father who had returned home after a confrontation with that self-same gang stepped out and got shot by a member of that gang.


The next obvious question as we learn that a 14-year old who cannot be named is arrested is how did a kid end up with a loaded gun with which he has wasted away a life?


A rotten police and a rotten job


Now we hear that the police are sorry for the way the initial investigation was conducted, well, they cannot be half sorry; the life of a young family has been ruined because the terminal point where the crime-investigation-prosecution-punishment chain should have kicked in at the first crime was left unaddressed because of police inaction.


One cannot begin to imagine what might have been going through the minds of the police when the young lady tried to report the first crime – could Canning Town in East London have been such a hopeless crime-ridden place that no crime was worthy of police attention?


Have we become so obsessed with prospective terrorist attacks that more intimate crimes no more attract interest and service?


Could, as in the case of Steven Lawrence a policeman detective have been manipulating and thwarting the investigation in favour of the suspects such that they can get away scot-free?


Taking back our society


We cannot begin to talk of the kind of people who brought forth this brood of vipers who have become a scourge on our society, who from youth have no concept of the value of life or property and have become a law unto themselves.


Sorry, is just not enough, relieving some senior policemen of their duties cannot begin to assuage the pain of that loss, in fact, apart from the prosecution of those youths; there should after a review of all the investigations of the police into the first crime charges of negligence, dereliction of duty and probably culpable homicide in seeking to address this murder should ensue.


We need to win our society back from the situation where it has become the playground of reckless criminal abuse and non-consideration for others.


Once kids get onto the first rung of a seemingly criminal existence they should be brought under strict supervision which in some cases should include confinement as well as monitoring, mentoring and vocational training – there is no scope for a politically correct assessment of this problem – society cannot afford to paper over deep seated social problems.


The parents should not only be named and shamed for allowed discipline and control to fail in the upbringing of their wards; whilst no one goes to parental school for childrearing; it is no excuse for unleashing devils unto our streets.


Institutionally incapable police


The police having been labelled institutionally racist are also becoming institutionally lazy in dealing with serious crime, it is unlikely that one can retain confident in a leadership that allows such serious issues to become headlines because requisite action has not been taken as needed to resolve crimes.


Just as I read on African Shirts a few days ago, I do not think London with all its culture, attractions and beauty is not close by far to the safest city in Europe


The heightened perception of vulnerability to crime needs to be addressed better as the deluded Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police suggests we can leave our front doors unlocked because of lessened crime, we find that we can still get shot at our doorsteps which it could have been prevented if the earlier stabbing had been given full police attention.


References

Telegraph | News | Young father shot dead as he challenges teenage yobs


Teen questioned over gun killing


Police sorry for inquiry 'hurt'


 

tags:                        

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




1. Chxta left...
Thursday, 24 August 2006 9:56 pm :: http://chxta.blogspot.com

Talk about having a safe society when children are no longer brought up properly. That must be the biggest joke...


Tag Related Posts

Thought Picnic: The Americe First Principle in Fort Hood

Saturday, 7 November 2009
The trigger for the killings at Fort Hood was pulled long before the guns went off, can the family of the US Army be a family of siblings that feel equal and respected no matter their diversity?

Nigeria: Lawmakers deliberate on the completely absurd

Friday, 30 October 2009
Lawmakers appeal to the sense of patriotism of armed robbers to ceasefireduring World Cup competition.

A relocation from the cacophony

Wednesday, 30 September 2009
From noise to more amenable people, the results confirm what would be an aggressive course of treatment, it is Day 9 at the hospital.

Nigeria: Our Own Comical Ali - Ogbonna Onovo

Monday, 21 September 2009
Amidst the news and incontrovertible evidence the Inspector General of Police denies a person of interest ever visited Nigeria.

Methinks this is Nigeria's own Comical Ali

Nigeria: Conflicted interests in the Boko Haram probe

Thursday, 6 August 2009
Whilst is it timely to institute a probe into the Boko Haram affair, asking the National Security Adviser to conduct a probe into the failure of the self-same security framework that allowed it cannot be impartial.

Nigeria: The Grim Reaper in the police station

Saturday, 1 August 2009
The killing of the leader of Boko Haram and its financier in police custody after being delivered to the police by the army fully subdued and bound brings great cause for concern about the rule of law in Nigeria.

Child twice raped by boys and parental abandonment

Sunday, 26 July 2009
The plight of children caught in unfortunate circumstances who become victims of old cultural norms.

A child of 8 is raped by 4 boys and her parents abandoned her for shame. Shame on the parents.

Nigeria: When women rage with the pudenda and the paps

Thursday, 30 April 2009
The women are using unusual weapons of warfare to effect political dialogue and change, I think it would be very effective

Using the law for silent sex

Tuesday, 28 April 2009
A noisily sexually active couple have a Anti-Social Behavioural Order slapped on them with the wife now in jail with the prospect of a jury trail.

Don't think that is what ASBOs were created for, let good commonsense prevail.

Thought Picnic: A world without bad religion

Friday, 24 April 2009
My Thought Picnic looks at how the interpretation of religion and religious views takes away from our community of humanity and denigrates womenfolk.

Nigeria: Why Candidates Fail Our Examinations - WAEC

Saturday, 18 April 2009
WAEC lists why candidates fail their examinations, I think they are unto something very true.

Nigeria: Obasanjo's Hard Talk

Friday, 20 March 2009
The ex-president of Nigeria - Olusegun Obasanjo was on Hard Talk and failed to answer the real questions.

Nigeria: Catch that goat

Monday, 26 January 2009
The law of the goat has caught an armed robber naked in police custody - well, go figure.

Singing like a Canary

Sunday, 11 January 2009
Back home from holiday.

Thought Picnic: Our Truth

Friday, 2 January 2009
The happenings in Gaza with the media grab by both Israel and Gaza is summed up in one sentence by the Israelis - We are showing the world our truth.

Is anyone entitled to their own truth - this is the first of my Thought Picnics.

Nigeria: Torture defended as standard police procedure

Thursday, 4 December 2008
The case of a man who supposedly committed suicide in police custody after reporting a crime seems to reveal more about abhorrent police practices that make you sick. Torture is defended as a necessary toll of detective work.

Nigeria: Ribadu and kids get bundled out of NIPSS graduation

Sunday, 23 November 2008
The erstwhile EFCC chairman gets bundled out of the NIPSS graduation cermony after the government fails by all other means to stop his graduation. His wife, 6 children and his guests all get pulled out of the event too.

Nigeria: Dutch parties demand Nigerian gang police force

Wednesday, 30 July 2008
Certain Dutch Political parties with a right-leaning disposition have asked the Justice Minister to create a permanent police unit to investigate specifically, Nigerian criminal gangs.

I worry for this kind of development.

Firing of Pardon Attorney hardly a victory for Nigerians

Saturday, 19 July 2008
The Pardon Attorney Roger C. Adams is fired for including racist recommendations in the clemency petition of a reformed Nigerian ex-convict minister.

I sympathise more with the attorney than the Nigerian immigrant.

Nigeria: Reforming the Justice System

Monday, 7 July 2008
Recognising that the Nigerin justice system is in need of radical reform is a first step in the process of assuring the rights of Nigerian citizens.

Lagos State has gone a lot further and this should be the template for reform in Nigeria as a whole.

Adedibu, Half of Ibadanland, the man is no more

Wednesday, 11 June 2008
The strongman of Ibadan, the elder thug that has plagued Oyo State with menace and with impunity - that power broker and peddler of the riotous mob - Alhaji Lamidi Adedibu has died.

Save the children - From their parents?

Tuesday, 6 May 2008
Children seem to be getting a raw deal from their parents if the news stories we have heard recently are anything to go by.

Do we now have to save the children from their parents?

Olympic torch lights up Tibetan cause

Wednesday, 9 April 2008
If anything, the Chinese have been naive to think they could pull off the Olympics without the spotlight being shone on their internal affairs including Tibet.

They should have known someone would take advantage of the Olympic year for this.

Wiping out another World's Lost Tribe

Friday, 28 March 2008
A reality TV company goes searching for lost tribes and may have inadvertently inflicted upon the tribe a deadly flu that could wipe them all out.

Do we have responsibilities for tempering our curiosity?

Inside China: Hatchlings of Democracy get nasty

Sunday, 23 March 2008
The election for class monitor of 8-year olds in China reveals a lot more about the machinations and manipulation of democracy and the dangers that might be ahead.

In Nigeria, can wives make independent choices?

Friday, 21 March 2008
A news story throws the spotlight on the husband-wife dynamic within a patriarchal hegemony.

The moral dilemma of mother rabbits

Saturday, 15 March 2008
Mothers and children from so many fathers and the dangers the children face growing up in possibly unstable environments. One child dies another goes missing "voluntarily".

Habiba Garba: Religion and violence against women

Monday, 3 March 2008
We have to take a stand against violence towards women and the way religion fails to address issues of humanity for keeping their rotten tenets.

I have a nano-dream

Monday, 21 January 2008
As we commemorate the Martin Luther King Day 2008, I do not think we are any nearer fulfilling the words of that "I have a dream" speech given almost 45 years ago.

We have individuals, fine, but not great numbers of people who have really made it.

Handling Internet Intimidation

Thursday, 17 January 2008
Handling an Internet menace of harassment can be a time-consuming and resource intensive business. However, sometimes one has to be tenacious enough to gather the evidence and bold enough to involve the police before it terrorises your existence.

Nigeria: Another two oil cremations

Sunday, 13 January 2008
News of Nigerians caught in the flames of oil burning amongst them hits the wires - two days in a row.

Guns and Churches for Security

Tuesday, 11 December 2007
Murder in the church and the right to bear arms could be difficult topics. But one wonders if church-goers need as much protection from others as they also need to be controlled by threat of the gun.

Religion for bitter or better people

Saturday, 1 December 2007
The teddy-bear affair and the ignorance of mercy

Policing Adedibu and Nigerian Crime

Friday, 16 November 2007
The crime situation in Nigeria from different perspectives of prevention and execution.

May Justice come for the killing of Yanire Izaga

Thursday, 13 September 2007
The father of the two-year old battered to death for disturbing her parent´s lie-in on a Sunday morning has been charged with her murder.

The unacceptable cult of death

Friday, 7 September 2007
An 11 year old was buried yesterday after being shot in an English town - much as there were witnesses, the criminal is still at large. When would our societies be outrahed enough to find this completely unacceptable?

Police in toilet misconduct

Saturday, 1 September 2007
A Republican senator would walk the plank of shame as his pleading guilty to a charge of lewd conduct through being importuned by a policeman gets the better of his circumstances.

Disgraceful police behaviour

Thursday, 23 August 2007
The police should go about their lawful duties fairly, justly and without reproach - it should not be too much to ask especially if you are an ethnic minority in Amsterdam.

The testimony, an ordeal

Thursday, 16 August 2007
A testimony about a kidnapping and spiritual activity.

News: Chasing the thrill

Thursday, 2 August 2007
Are these news chases really about getting us the news?

A London for yesterday

Wednesday, 1 August 2007
London last weekend

Qataris not flying by the seat of their culture

Sunday, 29 July 2007
The Qatari women would not sit beside men unknown to them on a commercial flight, so the flight gets held up for four hours and they still do not get to travel on that flight.

Middle finger the police

Monday, 16 July 2007
The middle finger is illegal in the Netherlands, cut it off before you visit.

London, 731 days on

Sunday, 8 July 2007
Two years on, London is getting on.

Reasoning out the girl's kidnap

Friday, 6 July 2007
Some think there is some justifiable reason for kidnapping the 3-year old girl in Port Harcourt - I completely disagree and I cannot be persuaded of why anyone would do such an evil deed.

Child in Niger Delta Kidnapping and Death Threat

Friday, 6 July 2007
The Niger Delta region is really now in lawless flux, a 3-year old girl was captured by criminals and had her life threatened. It is unforgivable, unacceptable and intolerable, the girl must be rescued, what should be done to the men is unprintable.

Hutu chikin Nigeria? Inaa!

Wednesday, 20 June 2007
Crime, safety and security in Nigeria is a big issue, in the space of weeks four international footballer were attacked in Lagos - this is not good at all.

A class struggle disguised as news

Monday, 4 June 2007
Class still counts for much in England even though it is not made too obvious to notice. The Daily Telegraph dabbles in these murky waters for an ulterior motive and one is not impressed.

Caught on Camera and keeping an open mind

Thursday, 8 March 2007
Police brutality on camera in Sheffield.

Surrogate Mum cooking @ 805

Wednesday, 27 December 2006
My visit to 805 a Nigerian restaurant in London leaves my completely satisfied and seriously impressed.

Back to James Blake and Rosa Parks - 1955 to 2006

Friday, 25 August 2006
Black students are asked to give up their seats for white students 51 years after Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat. America, we've got a serious problem.

A coffee blend bereft of Java beans

Monday, 7 August 2006
I just could not find the heart or inspiration to embark on a Java course, so that venture is postponed for 24 days whilst I seek some therapy through going on holiday.

Condi knows nothing about birth pangs

Saturday, 29 July 2006
Bombs and hostilities continue as birth pangs of a new Middle-East as the midwife returns to the woman in travail and extended labour to probably deliver the baby still-born. No new Middle-East can emerge with this belligerence.

Explaining a stolen lunchbox

Thursday, 27 July 2006
A hapless stranger gets mobbed and killed because some other stranger believes that his manhood has been stolen. This a part of reality in some parts of Nigeria. Unbelievable but true.

Evidence of good medical research

Tuesday, 25 July 2006
That testtube baby is 28 today - that was research done in Europe for the benefit of all - hopefully, America and see through the emotion of stem cell research just as Europe did yesterday.

Tone blind

Tuesday, 18 July 2006
Skin darkening (tanning) and skin lightening (toning) all get a look in as the sun tans some and the heat leads others to expose their toning mishaps. The Summer season is here at last.

The new ball order - Football meritocracy

Friday, 23 June 2006
The World Cup levels the playing field of political powers and undue influence - little countries make minced meat of behemoths and if you cannot play you get beaten and go home. The Olympics has nothing on the World Cup.

Arise! Sir easy

Saturday, 17 June 2006
The Chairman of easyGroup of companies is knighted in the Queen's birthday honours list- I suppose a new business can come out of this accolade - easyHonours?

The Joy of Living

Friday, 16 June 2006
20 years ago, a group of Christian joined in the United Artistes for Africa project to raise money for the Ethiopian famine victims. I remember only so much.

Insemination Tax Credit

Tuesday, 6 June 2006
If the President of the United States is really serious about strong marriages, he should stop going after gay marriage and rather strengthen marriage through Insemination Tax Credits.

Diplomatic tactlessness

Tuesday, 9 May 2006
The Iranian President writes to George Bush - they read and castigate - are there not other ways to reply to a letter? The US could have been more discrete, sensitive and mature about this episode - Unlikely!!

Parachuting into Antwerp

Sunday, 30 April 2006
Your mind is a parachute, it works better when open; is the open minded lesson I learnt from Antwerp this weekend.

Why Brussels doesn't work

Sunday, 23 April 2006
Europe and Brussels are synonymous, Brussels is a microcosm of Europe. What works works and what doesn't grates. We, the people of Europe have to protest vehemently to be heard but no guarantee of good results. This is Europe through storage lockers.

No harsh tongue for Mrs Verdonk

Monday, 23 January 2006
The Dutch have come up with a very innovative public places ban; whist we are still trying to stomach the smoking ban in some public places, we now have the prospect of banning other languages but Dutch in public places.

How in God's name, did this happen?

Wednesday, 4 January 2006
The media feeding frenzy around the West Virginia mine disaster just shows how rumour, speculation and incomplete information plays around with people's emotions.

Setting democracy ablaze with gas

Tuesday, 3 January 2006
This little Ukraine problem of gas supplies has more far-reaching consequences that could affect the whole basis of our democracy