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A handful of assaults and damage to property in the Scottish news every day – the Scottish ‘gangland feud’ is dwarfed by the massive plague of extreme drug gang violence and surging overdoses from England’s cities but this is hidden from you

By John Robertson,johnrobertson834

Copyright talkingupscotlandtwo

A handful of assaults and damage to property in the Scottish news every day – the Scottish ‘gangland feud’ is dwarfed by the massive plague of extreme drug gang violence and surging overdoses from England’s cities but this is hidden from you

Professor John Robertson OBA

The Record today making much of a crime wave tiny in the wider context of the English County Lines drug gangs plaguing Scotland.

What is the list of crimes affecting Scotland? This:

Timeline: How the gang feud developed

A series of attacks began on 2 March when a car was set on fire in Edinburgh’s Parrotshot area

A beauty salon in Leith and a garage in Portobello were also targeted over a 10-day period

Later, shots were reported as being fired at two properties in Niddrie and Pilton in separate incidents

Further firebomb attacks were reported on another house in Niddrie at the start of April, just as the first property in Glasgow was targeted in the Robroyston area

A carpet business in Bishopbriggs and another commercial premises in Kirkintilloch were also hit, alongside homes in Glasgow and Stepps

In April, a 72-year-old woman and a 12-year-old boy were assaulted at a house in Egilsay Crescent in Milton, Glasgow

Two more properties in Bishopbriggs were set alight

Two men were taken to hospital following a serious assault at a garage in East Kilbride on 19 May

A 54-year-old man needed hospital treatment after he was attacked by a group of men at a house at Pitcairn Grove, Edinburgh – the third time an incident is reported at this property

A fire at a ‘large house’ in the Bridge of Weir was set alight on 2 June https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cewdqxpg1zjo

Very upsetting, I know, for all involved but only damage to property and no serious violence, no deaths.

How does the above compare with the effects of the now 6 years, at least, of County Lines gangs from cities in England?

In the Express July 20th 2024, we read:

Knife crime epidemic rising faster in market towns after spread of county lines drug gangs. Knife crime is rising more rapidly in rural counties and market towns than in cities, a study has found. Although most of the police forces in the top 10 included large inner city areas, the study found offences were soaring at an alarming rate outside of urban regions.

According to Police Scotland, there are more than 50 County Lines drug and child-abusing groups active in Scotland, first identified in 2019, commonly in smaller towns where there is no existing local gang strong enough to resist their extreme violence or to compete with their prices. Auchinleck in East Ayrshire seems to be the only case of locals driving them out last November.

They are also more common up the east coast of Scotland, using the railway lines for their underage carriers and in the more deprived areas where their is a reasonably large existing market. In 2019, police raids were being made in Peterhead and in recent months they have raided in places as far north as Wick and as small as Tarves.

While there are no data available for knife crime specifically, a survey of non-sexual crimes of violence from 2018-2022 reveals a similar pattern to that found in England and reinforcing the evidence that County Lines gang activity is fuelling major surges in violence in Scotland’s smaller towns which had previously low levels of such crime.

In Glasgow and surrounding areas – Lanarkshire, Dunbartonshire, Inverclyde – non-sexual crimes of violence have increased but only by less than 10%.

In sharp contrast, the increases in such crime, in smaller towns, on or easily accessed from the main east coast rail lines from England, from 2018-2022, are shocking:

Borders – 78%

East Lothian – 47%

West Lothian – 53%

Perth & Kinross – 70%

Angus – 94%

Aberdeenshire – 71%

Moray – 96%

BBC Scotland alone refuses to cover this.

Source: https://datamap-scotland.co.uk/category/crime