I have joined the Public Bill Committee for the Offensive Weapons Bill. Public Bill Committees scrutinise proposed Acts of Parliament and members sit for lengthy sessions during which they question expert witnesses and discuss the Bill line by line.
The Offensive Weapons Bill is part of a wider Serious Violence Strategy to tackle the recent rise in serious crime and will make it harder than ever before for people to get their hands on dangerous weapons. The Bill prohibits possession of certain offensive weapons and corrosive substances such as acid, as well as strengthening restrictions on the sale of bladed and corrosive products.
During a series of Bill sessions last week I heard evidence from a range of organisations including local councils, victim support groups, firearms experts, representatives for traders and retailers, the National Crime Agency and the National Police Chiefs Council.
The Committee heard witness testimony about how 25% of knife crime last year could be attributed to gangs and children as young as just 10 or 11 are not only carrying knives, but actually perpetrating acts of violence with them too. The Committee also heard that children at school are carrying acid and that teenagers have been caught carrying out what one witness terms “a spree of attacks” in a very short space of time. In terms of gangs, the Committee heard that while the majority do still tend to be men, gangs are now recruiting increasing numbers of women and young girls and are targeting children who have been excluded from school.
I probed witnesses on issues including effective intervention, the demographics of perpetrators of knife crime including age and gender, and the effectiveness of current legal tests in place for offences including threatening with an offensive weapon.
This is an incredibly important Bill and the restrictions it introduces are sadly urgently needed given the recent increase in violent crime across the country. Some of the evidence we have heard so far is shocking, including the fact that children of primary school age are carrying around offensive weapons and using them to commit violent acts. It is crucial, therefore, that we get this Bill right and I take very seriously my responsibility as a member of the Committee to scrutinise every aspect of the Bill and ensure that we pass a piece of legislation that can be effective in protecting the public and providing the police with the powers they need to effectively tackle serious violence.
The Committee will resume its sessions after Parliament returns in September from the summer recess.