20-05-2025
Police Scotland chief appeals to young people not to carry knives
A police chief has urged young people not to carry knives, following the death of a teenager at the Moy, 16, from East Kilbride, died after a large disturbance on Irvine beach on Saturday evening. A 17-year-old boy has been charged with his was also a stabbing at Portobello beach in Edinburgh, resulting in a 16-year-old being charged with attempted Scotland Assistant Chief Constable Tim Mairs said the incidents demonstrated the "tragic consequences" of carrying knives.
He told BBC Scotland News: "The key message to children and young people is they shouldn't be carrying knives – it is absolutely the wrong thing to do."In a direct appeal to young people he said: "You may think it's something that makes you feel more secure, you may feel its something that makes you feel part of a group, you may think in an oblique way that its somehow protecting yourself. "But the tragic consequences at the weekend demonstrate how horrific, in a second, the fact that you're carrying a knife with you can be, and how it can end lives immediately."The clear message is do not carry weapons – do not carry knives."ACC Mairs said the weekend's events clearly demonstrated the impact of carrying knives and how "one second of madness can bring so much sorrow to so many people".However, he emphasised that Scotland was still a very safe society and said public spaces, beaches and parks were still safe places for people to added that police would be patrolling these areas during the good weather.
Three teenagers have died due to knife crime in Scotland over the space of a Mairs said that although the homicide rate was at its lowest in three years and in the past year there had been a 29% decrease in serious assaults, police were concerned about an increase in violence in said the force was working very closely with schools and campus police officers to understand why this was happening and to ensure schools were safe learning added that the carrying and use of knives and weapons by children and young people was also an increasing Scottish Violence Reduction Unit has said that younger people, aged 11-15, were now carrying Mairs said: "We are concerned that the average age of those involved in violence is getting younger and younger. Violence is a societal issue – we are working with partners to help address these trends."He added: "One death because of knife crime is unacceptable so forgetting trends, what happened over the weekend is tragic."