From:   "Earl W", [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/newsid_1169000/1169598.stm

Wednesday, 14 February, 2001, 11:01 GMT 

Time to take guns out of community

Harlesden has been plagued by gang-related shootings

Harlesden in north west London recently topped the league for
the highest murder rate in Britain. BBC News Online's
Community Affairs reporter, Cindi John, visited the area to
speak with police and public. 
Stand on the corner of Harlesden High Street and you will
see the whole spectrum of British society walk by. 

Click here to view map of Harlesden area. 


Harlesden, in north west London, is in the borough of Brent
where, according to the 1991 census, nearly half of all
residents were from minority ethnic groups. 

Harlesden borders a more affluent and famous neighbourhood,
Willesden, whose multi-cultural society was immortalised
in the novel White Teeth by Zadie Smith. 

      "I think the best thing to do is to give the police a
free hand and send these so-called Yardies abroad where
they come from, Jamaica."     
      James Ryan
      Harlesden resident

It seems tame enough as shoppers go about their business
on a bright weekday afternoon, but a recent spate of gun
crimes in Harlesden put the area at the top of police
league tables for the highest murder rate in the UK. 

Shootings have occured in busy streets at peak shopping
times. 

One recent confrontation involved bullets being fired
into a school playground after rival gang members clashed
in an adjoining street. 

Revenge attacks 

Bridge Park leisure centre on the outskirts of Harlesden is
one project the council hoped would help change the fortunes
of the area which is home to a large African Caribbean
population, dogged by high unemployment and poor economic
circumstances. 

But Chief Inspector Jim Farrell, of Brent police told BBC
News Online it was here the murderous spree began just
under two years ago. 



      Jim Farrell: "Police alone cannot end violence alone"
     

"We have a problem currently that began in May 1999 when we
had someone shot here at Bridge Park and within six months
seven people had been killed in the area. 

"Since that time we've had fewer deaths although they have
continued but a similar number of shootings," he said. 

Chief Inspector Farrell was at Bridge Park to help organise
the public unveiling of a community-based campaign aimed at
driving violent elements out of Harlesden. 

He said the reasons for the shootings were complex but many
were linked to two groups within the area, one comprised of
black British young men and the other predominantly men from
Jamaica. 

"Some of the attacks have been revenge attacks, some have
been related to what would be considered by most people to
be very trivial incidents, a lack of respect shown to
someone for example. 

"I wouldn't say it all boils down to drugs but there is
often a link with drugs in that the economic base of many of
the people involved in these attacks is the illegal supply
of drugs," said Mr Farrell. 

Unsafe 

The local MP, Paul Boateng, has backed the new anti-gun
crime initiative but that did not stop some shoppers in
Harlesden regarding it with cynicism. 

Angela Pitt, who has lived in Harlesden for 10 years, said:
"I'm not sure whether it will really make a difference. 

"They've tried things like this before, we'll just have to
wait and see." 



      Ann Huggett feels unsafe in Harlesden
     

Ann Huggett, who moved to Harlesden five years ago, felt
those who needed to take heed were likely to ignore the
campaign. 

"They're putting a lot of money in to try and raise people's
awareness of what's happening and why but it's only going to
affect the people who are involved and whether they're going
to listen or not I don't know," she said. 

Brent council has struggled hard to regenerate Harlesden
after major stores like Marks & Spencer left several years ago. 



      Rita Costa: "It's too dangerous to go out"
     

A new shopping arcade is a sign of the growing confidence in
the previously depressed commercial area. 

But locals fear businesses and shoppers could be scared away
if the violence is not stamped out soon. 

"It's getting to the stage where we feel unsafe to walk around
because these things are happening, 3 or 4 o' clock in the
afternoon, not at night time," said Mrs Huggett. 

Rita Costa, who has lived in Harlesden since 1999, said: "The
police should be a little more active, normally I don't go out
because I feel afraid. 

"I have children and I always have problems even sending them
to the shops because of this." 



      Bhavin Mehta: "Violence is unnerving"
     
A level student Bhavin Mehta seems resigned to continuing gun
violence. 

"It's unnerving at times and it does make you wary of your
surroundings and everything but I suppose you have to live
with it really, " he said. 

Pensioner James Ryan had his own solution to ending the
problems with gun crime. 

"The best thing to do is to give the police a free hand and
send these so-called Yardies abroad where they come from,
Jamaica. I know the innocent may be swept up with the guilty
but that's the price you pay," he said. 


a.. On Thursday a man was jailed for seven years at the Old
Bailey for stabbing to death a rival in a crowded mobile
phone shop in Harlesden. 
Rupert "Birdeye" James, 35, was acquitted of murdering
Dean Samuels but convicted of manslaughter. He claimed
Samuels had bullied and "dissed" him. 

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