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View Full Version : Labour defends 'success of Asbos'



John
08-24-2010, 08:20 AM
Labour has launched an effort to save anti-social behaviour orders (Asbos), accusing the Government of lacking the commitment to tackle crime and disorder.

Shadow home secretary Alan Johnson warned that scrapping the orders and cutting police budgets would "leave communities helpless and vulnerable".

Home Secretary Theresa May last month hinted the controversial orders could be scrapped as part of a wholesale reform of the approach to tackling yobs saying: "It's time to move beyond the Asbo."

Official figures showed more than half of the almost 17,000 Asbos issued between June 2000 and December 2008 were breached, leading to an immediate custodial sentence in more than half of the cases.

But Mr Johnson insisted the orders, introduced under Labour, were a "success".

He said: "Everyone remembers that under the last Tory government crime rocketed and anti-social behaviour was classed as low-level nuisance and not taken seriously.

"This time around, Tory Home Secretary Theresa May is wrongly claiming that Asbos don't work. The problem is not the powers available but her Government's lack of commitment to tackling crime and disorder in our communities.

"Anti-social behaviour destroys people's lives and neighbourhood groups agree with Labour. Asbos have worked and will continue to work provided they are used effectively.

"Together with the measures available and the proper funding of neighbourhood police teams, they have helped to reduce crime and anti-social behaviour on our streets."

He added: "Don't let the Tories turn the clock back to the days of rampant crime and anti-social behaviour in our communities."

Yahoo News.