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Home / World

UK riots: Gangs unite to fuel anarchy

By Ian Burrell
Independent·
10 Aug, 2011 05:30 PM4 mins to read

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When a 26-year-old man became the first fatality of the riots yesterday, dying in hospital after he was shot in a car in Croydon the night before, it was a sad testament to the violence at the heart of the riots that have swept across London.

But the incident also highlighted a deeper problem: the gang culture that suffuses the capital and seems to be a factor in the ongoing anarchy.

The man had been shot after he and a group of friends had got into a row with another group, an altercation that ended in a car chase and the shooting. That incident appeared to have been the result of a long-standing rivalry.

The complexity of London's gang culture was further revealed by reports that warped appeals for gang unity had been taking effect, with hastily made alliances between the criminal groupings said to have been set up before Tuesday's looting in Clapham. One constant throughout was surely hatred of the police. On one British "urban video" website, gang sympathisers gathered to discuss the burning and looting that had taken place in Tottenham on Sunday.

Some voiced concern that the gangs were not sufficiently co-ordinated in their attacks on police: "I would love it if every click [clique] from north, south, east turned on feds am telling you a lot of fed man will quit their job. This should be the new wave f*** this click on click beef its (sic) pointless."

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Other contributors to the Spiff TV site were more graphic: "Man got duppied [killed] and all these north London dons are just doing is dashing rocks, burning shops and buses. Instead of them to try kill some of the fed man."

Such is the bloody, perverse world of Britain's gang culture, where a code of the streets is ruthlessly enforced but nobody really seems to know the rules. "They are not organised criminal enterprises, they are mercurial and chaotic bodies," said John Heale, author of One Blood, a study of British street gangs.

According to research by Scotland Yard in 2007, London has 257 street gangs. Senior police officers, former gang members, frontline workers and academics are due to meet in London at the end of next month for Britain's third annual conference on Tackling Gangs and Serious Youth Violence.

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Although gangsterism is still very much a minority activity, more young people are being drawn into a minor affiliation, even those who do not take part in crime. The geographical (often postcode-based) identities of the gangs put an onus on all young men from a neighbourhood to show their allegiance, or risk being victimised. According to Heale, the rise of social media in the past decade has made it harder for youths to keep their distance.

As the gangs have managed to convince local youths that they somehow represent whole neighbourhoods - rather than simply their personal financial interests - police have struggled to overturn a wider perception that they are somehow the enemy.

Against this background, the riots have occurred. Tottenham, Hackney and Peckham are areas of some of the highest gang activity in Britain. And so, after several years of rising gang violence where rival crews targeted each other, the gangs have turned on the propertied classes.

It can hardly be a surprise. Barbara Wilding, one of Britain's most senior police officers, highlighted the dangers at a speech at London's Centre for Crime and Justice Studies in 2008. "In many of our larger cities, in areas of extreme deprivation, there are almost feral groups of very angry young people," she said, presciently. "Tribal loyalty has replaced family loyalty and gang culture based on violence and drugs is a way of life."

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