logo
The robbers, sex attackers and handbag thieves running riot on lawless London's trains as Tube crime surges

The robbers, sex attackers and handbag thieves running riot on lawless London's trains as Tube crime surges

Daily Mail​2 hours ago
Detectives are hunting for a series of robbers and attackers across London 's train network after a spate of violent incidents in recent weeks.
British Transport Police have issued five appeals for suspects this week as they probe reports of crimes such as sexual assaults, bicycle theft and wallet robbery.
Recent incidents in the capital have seen robbers try to grab shopping bags or handbags, or leave people with lasting injuries following violent incidents.
It comes after commuters were accused of assaulting a man who dropped his trousers on a District line train near Upton Park in East London on August 7.
BTP have interviewed two of the four vigilantes so far, while the man - who told them to 'f*** off' after requests to pull up his pants - was taken to hospital and sectioned under the Mental Health Act. No arrests have been made and the probe continues.
Police want to identify the other two men brawling with the man, who was initially arrested by an off-duty officer when he refused to cover up then wielded his belt.
During the incident the man began yelling then dropped his trousers and put his belt around his neck. His bottom and genitals were on show, sparking anger and revulsion around him on the train, which was busy with children on their summer holidays.
A passenger stood up and quickly confronted him, gesticulating angrily. He politely and firmly told him: 'You need to get off the train.' But the man began repeatedly yelling back: 'F*** off.' The commuter said in response: 'What do you mean "f*** off"? You need to get off the f***ing train. Now. There are kids on here.'
Footage of the incident showed up to four men kicking and punching the naked man, who was hitting them with his belt. He was later pinned to the floor of the carriage.
The man was then unceremoniously carried on to the Tube platform at East Ham and dumped to the floor. He was then held down as the commuters tried to alert staff.
Separately, a huge fight broke out at the entrance to Highbury and Islington station on July 17 - with a screaming toddler ending up on the floor in the melee.
Members of the public attempted to intervene as the group appeared to hurl a man down the stairs at the North London hub and throw punches and kicks at him.
Footage captured the chaos as a smartly-dressed man kicked the head of another in a grey tracksuit - as someone else threw a rucksack into the packed crowd.
Commuters attempted to break up the fight and helped a mother and her baby in a buggy get out of the way, before bystanders rushed to pick up the child off the floor.
Some 16,288 crimes were reported on the Underground network between January and August 2024 – a rise of 13 per cent on the same period the year before.
Bond Street (Elizabeth line, Zone 1)
A passenger was walking to the Elizabeth Line platforms at Bond Street late on a Sunday evening last month when a man grabbed her shopping bag.
The woman pulled the bag back and kept hold of it, but he then tried to grab her handbag during the incident at around 10pm on July 13.
She eventually managed to walk away with her belongings after other members of the public intervened – and detectives are now probing the attempted robbery.
A photograph of a man walking along a station corridor has been issued by police because they believe 'may have information which could help their investigation'.
BTP wants anyone who recognises the man to tell them with reference 391 of July 18.
Canning Town (Jubilee line, Zone 2/3)
A woman was sexually assaulted in a stairwell at Canning Town Underground station in East London on a Wednesday evening last month.
Detectives are now investigating the crime at 6.20pm on July 30 at the Jubilee line station, which has an interchange with the Docklands Light Railway.
They released a CCTV image in connection with the investigation, and believe the man in the picture 'may have information that could assist their enquiries'.
Anyone who recognises him should contact BTP with reference 161 of July 31.
Belsize Park (Northern line, Zone 2)
An Underground passenger was assaulted on a station platform and suffered what police described as a 'lasting eye injury' in a shocking assault.
Officers said the man was assaulted at the Grade II-listed Belsize Park station on the Northern line in North London just after 5pm on Saturday, June 19.
They have now released a CCTV image in connection with the assault because the man in the picture 'may have information which could help their investigation'.
Anyone who recognises him is asked to contact BTP with reference 514 of June 19.
Elstree & Borehamwood (Thameslink, Zone 6)
A 14-year-old boy was robbed of his bicycle on board a Thameslink train leaving Elstree and Borehamwood station in Hertfordshire heading into London.
The teenager was approached by a man on a Friday afternoon last month who stole his bicycle on the train, which was travelling towards Mill Hill Broadway.
Police do not know where the man left the train, but later the same evening he is believed to have been seen again exiting at Elstree and Borehamwood.
Detectives issued a photograph of a man who 'may have information that could assist their enquiries' following the incident at about 4.45pm on Friday, July 11.
Anyone who recognises him should contact BTP using reference 527 of July 11.
Southend East (c2c, Essex)
A man trying to buy a train ticket at a machine was robbed at knifepoint by a man and woman who approached him in the early hours of a Friday morning.
One of the robbers at Southend East, a c2c station in Essex, had a knife in their hand and pushed the man to the floor, demanding his wallet.
The man got up and tried to get away, but was punched and knocked to the floor during the incident in the seaside city on July 25 at about 4.30am.
As the man got up, several items of jewellery, a bag of medication, and a jacket containing his mobile phone were taken.
BTP investigating officer DC Nicola Avery said: 'We would like to speak to the two pictured as we believe they may have information that could help our investigation.
'While we appreciate the images may not show the clearest picture of the pair due to their face coverings, someone may recognise their clothing or notice something distinctive.'
Southend East is on the c2c line between Shoeburyness and London Fenchurch Street and Liverpool Street stations, and is popular with commuters to the capital.
Anyone who recognises either person in the images or has information about the robbery is asked to contact BTP, quoting reference 68 of July 25.
Anyone who recognises anyone in the photos can text BTP via 61016 or call 0800 40 50 40. They can also contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TikTok migrant who gave a step-by-step guide on how to cross the Channel 'filmed a how to kill your wife rant weeks before boarding small boat to Britain'
TikTok migrant who gave a step-by-step guide on how to cross the Channel 'filmed a how to kill your wife rant weeks before boarding small boat to Britain'

Daily Mail​

time5 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

TikTok migrant who gave a step-by-step guide on how to cross the Channel 'filmed a how to kill your wife rant weeks before boarding small boat to Britain'

A TikTok migrant who shared a 'step-by-step guide' on how to cross the Channel 'filmed a how to kill your wife rant weeks before boarding a small boat to Britain'. Parwiz Hanifyar, known online as Alexandra420, shared videos of his journey on TikTok and gained nearly one million views as he boasted about entering the UK illegally. Mr Hanifyar, who left Calais at around 4am on Saturday, even shared videos of himself on the small boat before live streaming in an asylum hotel. There, he told followers he was in 'the best place' while broadcasting from his free accommodation near Heathrow Airport. Now, it has been alleged that the TikTok migrant was reported to police for telling men how to kill their estranged wives in a social media clip filmed just weeks before he crossed the Channel, the Sun has reported. Speaking to his 70,000 followers from Germany, the Afghan, aged in his 20s, is said to have urged viewers to drink alcohol before attacking the women in a deliberate bid to get a softer sentence. In a disturbing clip in which he told viewers they 'must do this technique' using a household item, he said: 'Before I kill her, I drink a bottle of alcohol. 'When the police comes, they say, he was drunk.' Now, it has been alleged that the TikTok migrant (pictured) was reported to police for telling men how to kill their estranged wives in a social media clip filmed just weeks before he crossed the Channel, the Sun has reported Popular TikTok influencer Lemar is said to have been one of several individuals who reported the disturbing posts to the German authorities. However, Mr Hanifyar, who reportedly lived in Berlin for three years, then went on to relocate to France and later travelled to the UK. In response to the shocking video, Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp described the language used by the migrant as 'sickening'. Adding that Mr Hanifyar posed a threat to the UK, Mr Philp demanded that he be arrested and deported as a matter of urgency. Mr Hanifyar first sparked outrage after sharing a video of himself grinning in an orange jacket and pointing to the sky. He then showed the boat as it was surrounded by huge freight ships, set to the theme tune of US drama Prison Break. The migrant was one of more than 400 arrivals on Saturday and was taken in by Border Force officials to be processed in Kent. He was then taken to the four-star Crowne Plaza Hotel near Heathrow, where he started live streaming to his followers. In the live stream, he gave viewers a tour of his room, with two single beds and an en suite bathroom. He said: 'This is dedicated to those haters who were happy thinking we either drowned or ended up dead.' Mr Hanifyar later claimed the boat he illegally travelled on began to deflate halfway through the journey and would have sank if Border Force officials had not rescued them. He said: 'It was dangerous. Our boat sank. It was punctured. The water came from the inside of the boat. 'On the other side, three people pumped the water. If the British boats hadn't come in an hour, we would have been in trouble.' Despite nearly facing serious danger, he encouraged others to pay the people-smugglers to risk the dangerous crossing. He said: 'I risked my life, I spent my money, I came. Your country is not your mother. 'Those who want to come, this is the best place. Don't be stingy. Your country is not your father, that you are so stingy. Live your life. 'Tell your four friends to come. Why are you so stingy? Being stingy is not good for God. You see, I risked my life! Why don't you come? My wish was to come to this hotel and live. I came here just for this.' It comes just days after a record 107 small boat migrants reached Britain in just one dingy, confounding Labour's pledge to 'smash the gangs'. Images from the port of Dover showed human traffickers have begun to deploy a new, longer type of inflatable. The dinghy - which can barely be described as a 'small boat' - was recovered in the Channel and taken to Dover, where it was being examined by Border Force and law enforcement, GB News reported. It brought 107 migrants to Britain overnight, smashing the previous record of 96 people aboard one inflatable. Meanwhile, the number of small-boat migrants reaching Britain under Labour passed 50,000. Keir Starmer has been slammed for 'incompetence' over the handling of the Channel crisis, with the soaring figure a clear indication of the lack of a plan since he axed the Tories' Rwanda deportation scheme on his first day in power. Former Labour home secretary Jacqui Smith blamed the Tories, claiming: 'What is happening is the result of the last government.' Pictured: A group of people thought to be migrants are brought in to the Border Force compound in Dover, Kent, from a Border Force vessel following a small boat incident in the Channel on August 12 The Government's 'returns deal' with France appears to have done little to deter those determined to get to Britain, with the latest total including more than 1,500 arrivals in the seven days since the 'one in, one out' scheme launched. Pictured: migrants cross the Channel on August 6, 2024 In response, Reform Leader Nigel Farage criticised the Prime Minister on social media. He wrote: 'As I predicted five years ago, unless we deport illegal migrants the invasion will be huge. 50,000 since our weak Prime Minister took office and there is no sign of it stopping.' The Government's 'returns deal' with France appears to have done little to deter those determined to get to Britain, with the latest total including more than 1,500 arrivals in the seven days since the 'one in, one out' scheme launched. Official figures revealed there were 474 arrivals on Monday alone, bringing the total since the general election on July 4 last year to 50,271, despite the Prime Minister's promise to 'smash the gangs' behind the trafficking trade. The milestone was passed seven months earlier than under his Conservative predecessor, Rishi Sunak. Baroness Smith – who is now an education, women and equalities minister under Sir Keir – said: 'It is a completely legitimate claim to say that what is happening is the result of the last government that chose to focus on gimmicks with the Rwanda scheme.' Labour scrapped the Tories' Rwanda asylum deal – designed to deter migrants from crossing – as one of its first acts, pledging instead to 'smash the gangs' by boosting law enforcement. However, small boat numbers are soaring, with 27,029 arrivals this year, up by 47 per cent on the same point last year and 67 per cent on the same point in 2023. Since the start of the crisis in 2018, 178,167 migrants have reached Britain, with only about four per cent of them removed. The Home Office told The Sun that it does not comment on individual cases. In a previous statement issued regarding Mr Hanifyar, a Home Office spokesperson said: 'It is our long-standing policy not to comment on individual cases, but we have made clear that it is unacceptable for any individual, whether they are a member of a smuggling gang or otherwise, to promote the criminal services of people-traffickers or for social media companies to allow it. 'We are introducing specific laws through our Border Security Bill that will make it easier to prosecute individuals who publish material online which promotes or offers services facilitating small boat crossings, and these kinds of cases show why it is so essential for that Bill to be passed through Parliament at the earliest opportunity.' A TikTok spokesperson previously said: 'We take a zero-tolerance approach to content promoting human smuggling, this account has been banned and we remove the vast majority of content before it is even reported. 'Through industry-leading search interventions and close collaboration with the UK National Crime Agency, we work to identify and disrupt organised immigration crime online, adapting our efforts to meet evolving threats.'

Child sexual exploitation victims 'not in scope' of violence against women and girls strategy
Child sexual exploitation victims 'not in scope' of violence against women and girls strategy

Sky News

time13 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Child sexual exploitation victims 'not in scope' of violence against women and girls strategy

Victims of child sexual exploitation are "not explicitly within the scope" of the Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) strategy being drafted by the government, Sky News can reveal. Child Sexual Abuse and Exploitation (CSEA) is a form of child abuse, described by police as a "critical threat" to women and girls. It includes crimes such as grooming, and can involve both physical contact, such as rape, or non-physical - like forcing children to look at sexual images. Sky News has been shown an internal Home Office document presented to various stakeholders in the sector. It's titled "Scope of the Strategy... Our draft definition of VAWG", and says that while it recognises "links" between VAWG and child sexual exploitation, it is not "explicitly within the scope of the strategy". "VAWG is Violence Against Women and Girls. If you take child sexual abuse out of it, where are the girls?" Poppy Eyre told Sky News. Poppy was sexually abused and raped by her grandfather when she was four. It wasn't until she was 11, after a PHSE lesson on abuse at school, that she understood the enormity of what had happened. "I remember very vividly when the police came round and told me… this is what we're charging him with," said Poppy. "We're charging him with sexual abuse and rape. And I remember being like, I had no idea that's what it was, but I know that's really bad." Poppy's grandfather was convicted and died in prison. She questions how authorities would police crime if child sexual abuse is excluded from an umbrella strategy to tackle violence against women and girls. "Are they holding child sexual abuse at the same level of importance as they are with violence against women? You'd hope so, but potentially not, because it doesn't need to be in the figures", she said. The government has pledged to halve VAWG within a decade, by 2035. "If the government are measuring themselves against halving violence against women and girls - if they're not looking at the scale of child sexual abuse and child sexual exploitation within that - that will mean we are failing many young victims of abuse," said Andrea Simon, director of campaign group End Violence Against Women. The Centre of Expertise on Child Sexual Abuse, which is funded by the Home Office, estimates 500,000 children in England and Wales are sexually abused every year. 'Danger' of having separate plan Rape Crisis told Sky News that "for any strategy to be effective" it "must include all forms of gender-based violence against all women and girls", suggesting there is a "danger" in having a separate plan for child sexual abuse. Its chief executive, Ciara Bergman, said it could create a "problematic and potentially very unhelpful" distinction between victims of domestic abuse, expected to be covered by the strategy, and child sexual abuse. "Some perpetrators of domestic abuse also sexually abuse their children," she told Sky News. The government insists the strategy will include action to tackle child sexual abuse, but says it also plans to create a distinctive programme to address its specific crimes. "Sexual abuse is violence against a child," said Poppy's mother, Miranda Eyre, who now works as a counsellor specialising in trauma. "It is violence against girls… and you can't separate it out," she said. "I'm speechless to be honest… it does make me quite angry." A Home Office spokesperson told Sky News it is "working tirelessly to tackle the scourges of violence against women and girls and child sexual abuse". "These issues are complex and run deep within the fabric of society," they added.

Warning shoplifting 'out of control' after Highland rise
Warning shoplifting 'out of control' after Highland rise

BBC News

time33 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Warning shoplifting 'out of control' after Highland rise

Shoplifting is "out of control", a retail organisation has warned after police figures showed the crime had increased sharply in the Highlands in recent Against Crime said one of the problems was there were "little or no consequences" for persistent offenders.A Police Scotland report to Highland Council said the five-year average for shoplifting in the region was 919 incidents, while in 2023-24 there were 1,487 and a further 1,349 in Secretary Angela Constance said the Scottish government recognised the significant harm and disruption caused by retail crime in Scotland and had provided Police Scotland with an extra £3m to tackle the problem. The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) said it gave "careful consideration" to any reports of alleged criminal conduct. Retailers Against Crime director Maxine Fraser said shoplifting threatened to put small, family-run shops out of told BBC Scotland News: "We work very closely with Police Scotland and we know that they do as much as they can - they will stop offenders and have them arrested."Then if or when it goes to court there are virtually no consequences."If someone is a prolific offender why on earth would they stop if nothing is going to happen to them."Ms Fraser said she accepted jail time was not always the answer and suggested more emphasis be placed on rehabilitation and education - including teaching schoolchildren about the impact of said most of the crimes were not associated with the cost of living crisis but linked to serious and organised crime, or people who were stealing to make money from reselling the goods."It's out of control," she said. 'Massive amount' The police report was discussed at a meeting of Highland Council's communities and place committee on Scotland's North Division commander, Ch Supt Robert Shepherd, told the meeting: "We do see last year there was a massive, massive amount of shoplifting - twice the previous years'."He said the latest figures showed a drop, but added that officers were working to further reduce the number of Supt Shepherd also said an inspector was based in Inverness as part of a Scottish government-funded team targeting retail crime across Scotland. Justice Secretary Angela Constance said the additional funding had been provided as part of £1.6bn of investment in policing this said: "Police Scotland has established the Retail Crime Taskforce that is targeting affected areas to prevent crime and pursue those responsible."It is also working with retailers to identify ways in which they can enhance security and reduce incidents occurring."Punishments for shoplifting can include fines, community work and a prison said it was taking action to prosecute shoplifters.A spokesperson said: "COPFS will give careful consideration to any reports of alleged criminal conduct which are submitted by the police."Prosecutorial action will be taken if the reports contain sufficient admissible evidence of a crime and if it is appropriate and in the public interest to do so." Fraud also on the rise In January, police said rates of shoplifting and fraud in Inverness had increased over the previous 12 were 680 shoplifting incidents in 2024-25, almost 13% more than the 603 reported in 2023-24. For fraud, the figures were 155 incidents in 2023-24 and 168 in Scotland said the three-year average for shoplifting in the city was 423 incidents and 408 for the five-year a report to Highland Council, the force said the detection rate for the crime was 63% but only 14% for fraud.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store