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PSNI reports lowest ever number of anti-social behaviour reports across NI

PSNI reports lowest ever number of anti-social behaviour reports across NI

Figures published by the PSNI have revealed details of crime incidents reported over the 12 months to March 31, 2025, including anti-social behaviour, domestic abuse, hate-motivated crime and drug seizures.
According to the figures there has been a decrease in crime in Northern Ireland.
There were 8,233 fewer crime incidents in NI over the past 12 months, a 7.9% drop from 2023/24 – including reductions in violent offences, criminal damage and harassment.
Anti-social behaviour reports were also recorded at their lowest since the data series began in 2006/7, with 1,004 less incidents reported.
Deputy Chief Constable Bobby Singleton praised the latest statistics, saying: 'These significant reductions demonstrate once again that not only is Northern Ireland one of the safest places to live, work and raise a family but also that the PSNI is a service that everyone here can be proud'.
The Deputy Chief Constable also expressed his worry over declining police numbers. 'The continued contribution of our officers and staff to these reductions really shouldn't be under-estimated or taken for granted,' he said.
"It's also important to recognise that whilst the overall number of crime and anti-social behaviour incidents has reduced, the work that goes into dealing with them is becoming increasingly complex and resource-intensive.'
Despite a decrease in general crime, the PSNI have also revealed that last year saw the highest number of race hate crimes and incidents since records began.
Official statistics show that there were 454 more race incidents and 349 more race crimes recorded in comparison to the previous year.
There were 1,807 race incidents and 1,188 race crimes documented in the 12 months from 1st April 2024 to 31st March 2025 – the highest financial year levels recorded since the data series began in 2004/05.
A spokesperson for the activism group, United Against Racism Belfast, told this newspaper that 'the statistics on hate crime in the past year are disturbing and infuriating'.
"Attacks on migrant communities have become virulent, both online and on the streets of our shared city,' they added.
"Deliberate disinformation and hate-mongering around immigration, including by the current government, strip the humanity of Black, minority ethnic, Muslim and migrant communities.
"As a result, we have seen multiple attacks on people for no other reason but the colour of their skin, their language or their perceived immigration status.'
"This must stop'.
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Fringe 2025: Conversations with the Godless: Peter Tatchell
Fringe 2025: Conversations with the Godless: Peter Tatchell

Edinburgh Reporter

time2 hours ago

  • Edinburgh Reporter

Fringe 2025: Conversations with the Godless: Peter Tatchell

Peter Tatchell has been arrested 103 times (though convicted only once) and lived to tell the tale. He may be best known as an LGBT+ rights activist, but he's campaigned for numerous causes over the last 58 years. Today he's here at The Stand to talk about his life and career with Chief Executive of Humanists UK, Andrew Copson. Tatchell is a patron of the organisation. 'He's very necessary…incredibly brave…doing good work in a world where most people are too timid' Sir Elton John Is Tatchell happy, asks Copson, with being described as a 'veteran humans rights campaigner'? Indeed he is, and at the age of 73 he has no plans to retire, and has said that he intends to carry on protesting well into his 90s. His activism is motivated by a sense of injustice, born of two key events in his working class Melbourne childhood. Australia had no free health care until 1975, and even after that it was patchy. Tatchell's mother was severely asthmatic; her treatment swallowed up most of the family's money; was that fair? Things got worse when his mother remarried a violently abusive man; both Peter and his mother suffered, but Australia at that time had no women's refuges, no charities that might help. 'It left me with a burning sense of injustice.' In 1963 white racists bombed the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, a key civil rights meeting place. Four young girls were murdered. The bombing marked a turning point in the US, and a pivotal moment for 11 year-old Peter Tatchell. His interest in the Black Civil Rights movement led to his first campaign, opposing the death penalty in the state of Victoria. While it did not succeed in saving the life of an alleged murderer against whom evidence was poor, it did help fuel a public outcry. By 1969 Tatchell realised he was gay. Homosexual activity was still a crime in Victoria – punishments included long prison sentences and compulsory psychiatric treatment. He'd heard about the Stonewall uprising in the US: 'I had no gay role models, so when I heard about Stonewall I thought 'YES! I want to be a part of that.' When his friends were too scared to join him in a public campaign, he started writing to newspapers, at first anonymously but later in his own name. He was very scared, but again that sense of injustice won through, coupled with his lifelong view that, 'it's always better to do something than nothing.' He adapted his campaign from the Black civil rights movement. Credit: Peter Tatchell Foundation Two years later, he moved to the UK. He opposed Australia's involvement in Vietnam, wanted to avoid the draft, and thought he'd stay just two years, until the government changed back home. He's been here ever since. He stayed partly because the 1967 Sexual Offences Act had partially decriminalised homosexual acts. In Australia they were still illegal. The Gay Liberation Front, the first mass movement of LGBT people in the UK, was campaigning. Within five days Tatchell was at his first meeting; less than a month later he was campaigning, 'It was so exciting to be part of that.' Tatchell had noted that non-violent direct action had worked for the Black Civil Rights movement when lobbying the President had not, and decided to try the same approach for LGBT+ rights. In the 1970s and 80s the Westminster Parliament would not even allow a discussion of LGBT rights. In 1972 he helped organise the UK's first Pride march. That year GLF started to splinter; eventually, in the 90s, Tatchell and some other members formed OutRage! They also worked with lobbying groups like Stonewall. You need, he says, a two-pronged approach; direct action and lobbying are not mutually exclusive. Every campaign begins at the grassroots, 'Parliament is usually the last place to get a message.' OutRage! used protests to attract media coverage and raise public consciousness about the scale of LGBT+ oppression; when public opinion starts to shift, he says, MPs have to listen. Prior to the direct action campaign there was almost no public awareness of what was going on. Credit: Peter Tatchell Foundation In 1998 he and other activists famously interrupted the Archbishop of Canterbury's Easter sermon at Canterbury Cathedral. At the time. Tatchell says, the Archbishop opposed changes in the law to give LGBT+ people equal rights; he also opposed same-sex marriages, and supported the ban on LGBT+ people fostering children. OutRage! had been requesting a meeting with him for eight years; if he wouldn't come to them, they'd go to him. Tatchell walked up to the pulpit and began his own sermon; discrimination, he said, was not Christian. As the police tried to remove him he clung on to the pulpit, which promptly fell to pieces. Church wardens punched and scratched him. A video of the event proved he had not damaged the pulpit, but he was still charged with 'indecent behaviour in a church', 'I did not have my trousers down!' Magistrates had no choice but to convict him, but they fined him just £18.60 in reference to the date of the statute under which he'd been charged. Copson asked Tatchell about OutRage!'s controversial outing of closeted people. Tatchell insists this is not what happened, that the group never named anyone just because they were gay or closeted. What it did do was name some influential closeted people who were using their positions to target the LGBT+ community. Those people were ten Anglican bishops, who persisted in saying homosexuality was a sin and LGBT+ people should not have equality before the law, 'There was no Biblical justification for it at all. After that not one of them said anything more against the community.' OutRage! also wrote to twenty MPs who'd voted in favour of anti-gay laws, saying that this was hypocritical given their own sexuality, 'There was no threat, we told them it was their own decision but we hoped they would choose the morally right option. Most of them never voted in this way again.' The irony of the tabloid press's two-faced approach is not lost on him, 'When they outed adulterous 'family values' MPs, there was no outcry. When we did it we were called terrorists and LGBT+ fascists.' Any regrets about it, asks Copson? Only, replies Tatchell, that he wishes he'd used that tactic earlier to deal with bigots; he still thinks it's a good one, and he's trying to encourage LGBT+ people in Poland to use it, 'but they're scared.' Would he advocate its use in African and Arab countries, where, says Copson, well known closeted statesmen impose anti-LGBT laws? 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The definition of 'hate' is difficult, and laws that were intended to protect people are often used for other purposes. He's very concerned about current policing; human rights legislation should not be interpreted as a tool to prevent people expressing a legitimate opinion. In May this year he attended a Palestinian Solidarity march with a placard, 'Stop Israeli genocide, stop Hamas executions.' He was arrested for 'racially and religiously aggravated breach of the peace.' 'My criticism of Hamas, a proscribed organisation, mentioned neither race nor religion, but that was the basis of my arrest….the Met eventually told me there'd be 'no further action' – there will be from me! The English Public Order laws were written to deal with football violence and violent street disorder, but I've been arrested for a 'Gay Equality Now' sign. The laws are so broad they can be used to justify anything.' After decades of Tory government, what, asks Copson, does Tatchell think of Keir Starmer's new regime? Is it better? No, Tachell replies, it's a huge disappointment. Starmer promised to outlaw gay conversion therapy; nothing has happened. Exorcisms and beatings are still being inflicted on LGBT+ people. The Scottish government has also dropped its commitment to legislate against this. In opposition, the Labour Party condemned the anti-Trans agenda. Now it's banned puberty blockers (on the basis that they are dangerous) for young trans children, but not for non-trans children with early onset puberty. So are they 'dangerous' or not? Keir Starmer has said that the much discussed Supreme Court decision on 'biological sex' 'provides clarity' – 'rubbish' says Tatchell. The Court took representations from anti-Trans groups but not from any Trans ones. It even refused to allow the intervention of Dr Victoria McCloud, the UK's first transgender judge, and Stephen Whittle of the Good Law Project. (McCloud intends to take the government and the Supreme Court to the European Court of Human Rights.) 'Would they make a decision about Black issues without hearing the representations of the Black community?' As the session draws to a close, the audience has many questions, Tatchell's views on the monarchy being one of them. He supports its abolition on the basis that it is incompatible with democracy. Public positions of statehood, he says, should be open to everyone; the crown, the highest office in the land, excludes every single one of us except the Windsor family. This is also 'profoundly, if unintentionally, racist, as no person of colour can ever be head of state.' He doesn't want to see a president with executive powers, but one with only ceremonial duties, as in Germany, would be good. 'It'd be much cheaper too.' Credit: Peter Tatchell Foundation Another question focuses on the Trans community. What does he think should be done to protect them, and how do we build a broad base of allyship? Public opinion, says Tatchell, has shifted against trans people and a different approach is now needed. His controversial view is that trans and non-trans people are not the same, though they are of course equal, and their differences should be celebrated, 'We should say 'yes, there is a difference, but it's great.'' He feels this could bring the community more public support. He also thinks much more work needs to be done to highlight the shared experiences of trans and non-trans women. They both suffer misogyny, domestic abuse, hate crimes and prejudice and should be working together to oppose these things. A final question asks for his views on the rights of Indigenous Peoples in his native Australia. Having heard that many Aboriginal students were leaving school early to work to support their families, he and others campaigned for a scholarship fund to help them stay on to get qualifications, better jobs and the ability to uplift their own communities. The scheme still exists today and has helped many people. Credit: Peter Tatchell Foundation Peter Tatchell is often described as a 'fearless' campaigner, but he mentions more than once that he has been 'terrified' when taking direct action. He's been violently assaulted over 300 times, his coordination, memory, balance, vision and concentration are somewhat impaired, and he suffers from PTSD. Nevertheless, he has always persevered, still motivated by that burning sense of injustice, still always ready to put himself out there to try to right the many wrongs of the world. Not many people have been prepared to stick their neck out as consistently as he has over almost six decades of protest. Is he brave, foolhardy or a combination of both? I'll stick with Richard Holloway's opinion, A modern-day prophet…dauntingly brave in his pursuit of equality and justice Rchard Holloway Conversations with the Godless is a series of events being hosted by Humanists UK at The Stand Comedy Club, York Place (various Venue numbers, please check) this August. Journalist and broadcaster Polly Toynbee and writer, comedian and broadcaster (The Infinite Monkey Cage with Brian Cox) Robin Ince are next, on 14 and 15 August (times vary.) For full details please check the Fringe tab on The Stand website here. The Peter Tatchell Foundation promotes and protects the human rights of individuals, communities and nations, in the UK and internationally. Read more here and sign up for Peter's free weekly newsletter here. Like this: Like Related

West Belfast:  Hospitals having difficulty contacting patients after 5G mast fire
West Belfast:  Hospitals having difficulty contacting patients after 5G mast fire

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

West Belfast: Hospitals having difficulty contacting patients after 5G mast fire

Hospitals are having difficulties contacting patients and managing "critical on-call arrangements," after a 5G mast was set on fire in west Belfast, police have fire, in the Glen Road, was reported to police at about 20:40 BST on follows a recent series of arson attacks on masts, mostly in west fire was put out by the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service (NIFRS). 'Vulnerable members of society' PSNI Det Insp McAnee said latest in a series of attacks on 5G masts in the area had was having a "damaging impact on individuals, businesses and vital services".The officer said affected hospitals in the area were having communication problems and that members of the public, particularly those who are vulnerable, are being "left in a position where they are unable to make emergency calls or contact family".Police are appealing to the public to come forward with any information and said they were actively pursuing a number of lines of believe there are people with knowledge that could assist us in identifying those responsible for these attacks MP for the area, Paul Maskey, said the "ongoing campaign by a small minority to destroy vital infrastructure in our city is having a detrimental impact on our communities"."The fact that these arsonists feel comfortable carrying out these acts in broad daylight on a main road is deeply concerning, and is an indictment of the lack of action taken to date."

Spate of 5G mast attacks impacting hospital communications, PSNI say
Spate of 5G mast attacks impacting hospital communications, PSNI say

BreakingNews.ie

time2 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Spate of 5G mast attacks impacting hospital communications, PSNI say

An ongoing spate of attacks on 5G mobile phone masts in Belfast are leading to hospitals experiencing communication difficulties when contacting patients, police have said. In the latest incident, detectives have appealed for witnesses and information after an arson attack on a mast in Poleglass on Thursday. Advertisement There have been a number of similar incidents in recent months. The majority have been in west Belfast, although an incident earlier this week occurred in the south of the city. A PSNI statement said: 'We received a report at around 8.40pm on Thursday August 14 of a 5G mast fire in the Glen Road area. 'Officers attended the scene, along with colleagues from the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service, who safely extinguished the fire. Appeal for information following 5G mast fire in west Belfast. Details here: — Police West Belfast (@PSNIBelfastW) August 15, 2025 'This is the latest in a series of attacks on 5G masts in the area, which we know are of great concern and cause significant disruption to the local community. Advertisement 'These attacks are having a damaging impact on individuals, businesses and vital services. ​ 'Hospitals that are affected are experiencing communication difficulties in contacting patients and managing critical on-call arrangements, and members of the public – particularly those who are vulnerable – are being left in a position where they are unable to make emergency calls or contact family.' The statement said the force is continuing to take the spate of attacks seriously. It added: 'Detectives are actively pursuing a number of lines of inquiry and we remain committed to identifying those responsible and bringing them to justice. 'We remain of the belief that there are individuals with knowledge that could assist us in identifying those responsible for these attacks and, once again, are appealing to the public to help us by coming forward with any information they may have. Advertisement 'Any information, no matter how inconsequential it may seem, is important and could be crucial in helping us identify those responsible and stopping these attacks.' ​ Sinn Féin councillor Ronan McLaughlin said the attacks on 5G masts are 'having a detrimental impact on our communities'. He added: 'That these arsonists feel comfortable carrying out these acts in broad daylight on a main road is deeply concerning, and is an indictment of the lack of action taken to date. 'With poor connectivity now common in west Belfast, there is a real risk lives could be lost because of weak phone signal. 'It's time for those involved to face justice and be taken off our streets.' Advertisement On Wednesday night a fire was started at a 5G mast in the Annadale Embankment area of south Belfast.

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