Four killed in London New Year knife violence

A police officer talks with local residents at a police cordon near to a house in Newport, south Wales, on September 20, 2017, as they continue their investigations into the September 15 terror attack on a London underground tube train carriage attack at Parsons Green station. Two men were arrested in Wales on Wednesday over last week's London Underground terror attack in which 30 people were injured, bringing the total number of people in custody to five, police said. The men, aged 48 and 30, were arrested under anti-terrorism legislation in Newport in Wales, police said, after a 25-year-old man was arrested in the same city on Tuesday. / AFP PHOTO / GEOFF CADDICK

A police officer talks with local residents at a police cordon near to a house in Enfield, north London./ AFP PHOTO / GEOFF CADDICK

Four young men were stabbed to death in unrelated incidents in London on New Year’s Eve, while a fifth is in a critical condition in hospital, police said Monday.

The unusually concentrated spate of violence will add to growing concerns about knife crime in the British capital, which is at its highest level for five years.

At least 80 people were killed in stabbings in London in 2017, more than half of them under the age of 25.
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Detectives launched four separate murder investigations into the overnight attacks, which took place away from the city centre, where more than 100,000 people had gathered to watch the New Year’s Eve fireworks.

An 18-year-old man was stabbed in Enfield, north London, late on Sunday evening, and later died in hospital. Five men have been arrested, police said.

Earlier, at around 7.30 pm (1930 GMT), a 20-year-old man was stabbed in West Ham in east London, while in Tulse Hill, in the south, a 17-year-old boy was killed at around 10:40 pm.

In the early hours of Monday morning, a 20-year-old man was fatally stabbed in Old Street, a busy area filled with bars and clubs east of the city centre.

A second man in his 20s was hurt in the same incident, and was taken to hospital suffering critical stab injuries.

“It is heart-breaking that, at a time when so many of us are contemplating what lies ahead in 2018, four families are dealing with the grief of losing a loved one to senseless violence and the callous use of knives as lethal weapons,” said police commander Neil Jerome.

Police registered almost 12,100 knife attacks in London in the year to March 2017, which left more than 4,400 people injured — the highest figures in five years.

A spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Police said Monday that 77 people died from knife crime in the city between January 1, 2017, and December 22.

In November, Mayor Sadiq Khan’s office revealed that 40 of those killed since the start of the year were under the age of 25.

Khan has launched a major campaign to reduce knife crime, including giving some high-risk schools metal detectors, while the government is also looking into tougher measures for people carrying knives.
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