Posted January 20, 200817 yr JACQUI SMITH, the home secretary, has admitted she would feel unsafe walking the streets of London late at night. In an interview with The Sunday Times, she said she would not feel comfortable out alone after dark in deprived areas such as Hackney or even affluent ones like Kensington or Chelsea. She claimed streets at night were safer after 10 years of Labour in power but opposition politicians said her comments exposed the failure of the government’s policies on crime. In the interview, Smith, the first woman home secretary, was asked whether she would feel safe walking on her own around Hackney at midnight. She replied: “Well, no, but I don’t think I’d ever have done. You know, I would never have done that, at any point during my life.” Asked why not, she answered: “Well, I just don’t think that’s a thing that people do, is it, really?” It was pointed out that some people, such as shift workers, had no choice. She was also asked whether she would feel unsafe walking around an area such as Kensington and Chelsea. “Well, I wouldn’t walk around at midnight and I’m fortunate that I don’t have to do that,” she replied. Smith, who is protected by police bodyguards, said she had walked around Redditch, her Worcestershire constituency. “I don’t get the opportunity to walk around on my own now but I certainly have done in the recent past, on my own.” After the interview, a worried aide called The Sunday Times saying the wording had not come out as the home secretary had intended. She said Smith had recently “bought a kebab in Peckham” at night. The south London district is one of the most deprived in the capital. Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said: “It’s astonishing the home secretary admits that after 10 years of a Labour government, our capital is a no-go area for women at night.” Crime has fallen but research last year found most people do not believe the figures. Only a quarter say they feel confident the government is cutting crime. In a YouGov survey in August, 46% of Londoners said they did not feel safe in their neighbourhoods at night. Last year in Hackney, police recorded a 10% rise in crimes to 2,715, including 580 violent assaults, 112 muggings and seven rapes. In Kensington and Chelsea, crime fell 13%. Other figures reported last night showed a 21% rise in violent crime nationally among 10 to 17-year-olds in three years. The Home Office declined to comment on reports that Smith would soon fund expanded use of walk-through scanners at school doors to detect knives carried by pupils. Smith admitted the government had a “big job” to persuade people urban areas had not become more dangerous. “I understand that whilst it’s a fact that crime is falling, what you want to know is what’s happening on your street; what the police officers in your area are doing and who they are. That’s one thing we’ll provide to people. Serious violence is something we need to address.” Source: Sunday Times And yet this Government keep churning out statistic after statistic saying crime is falling <_<
January 20, 200817 yr Yeah apparently she's also said that she walked alone recently to a kebab shop late at night. Well she can't have as she has Protection Officers 24 hours a day and doesn't go anywhere alone. No Home Secretary does. Edited January 20, 200817 yr by Crazy Chris
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