Britain and
Australia top US in violent crime
Rates Down Under increase despite
strict gun-control measures
By Jon Dougherty
WorldNetDaily.com
Law enforcement and
anti-crime activists regularly claim that the United States tops the charts
in most crime-rate categories, but a new international study says that
America's former master -- Great Britain -- has much higher levels of crime.
The International Crime
Victims Survey, conducted by Leiden University in Holland, found that
England and Wales ranked second overall in violent crime among
industrialized nations.
Twenty-six percent of
English citizens -- roughly one-quarter of the population -- have been
victimized by violent crime. Australia led the list with more than 30
percent of its population victimized.
The United States
didn't even make the "top 10" list of industrialized nations whose
citizens were victimized by crime.
Jack Straw, the British
home secretary, admitted that "levels of victimization are higher than
in most comparable countries for most categories of crime."
Highlights of the study
indicated that:
- The percentage of
the population that suffered "contact crime" in England and
Wales was 3.6 percent, compared with 1.9 percent in the United States
and 0.4 percent in Japan.
- Burglary rates in
England and Wales were also among the highest recorded. Australia (3.9
percent) and Denmark (3.1 per cent) had higher rates of burglary with
entry than England and Wales (2.8 percent). In the U.S., the rate was
2.6 percent, according to 1995 figures;
- "After
Australia and England and Wales, the highest prevalence of crime was in
Holland (25 percent), Sweden (25 percent) and Canada (24 percent). The
United States, despite its high murder rate, was among the middle
ranking countries with a 21 percent victimization rate," the London
Telegraph said.
- England and Wales
also led in automobile thefts. More than 2.5 percent of the population
had been victimized by car theft, followed by 2.1 percent in Australia
and 1.9 percent in France. Again, the U.S. was not listed among the
"top 10" nations.
- The study found that
Australia led in burglary rates, with nearly 4 percent of the population
having been victimized by a burglary. Denmark was second with 3.1
percent; the U.S. was listed eighth at about 1.8 percent.
Interestingly, the
study found that one of the lowest victimization rates -- just 15 percent
overall -- occurred in Northern Ireland, home of the Irish Republican Army
and scene of years of terrorist violence.
Analysts in the U.S.
were quick to point out that all of the other industrialized nations
included in the survey had stringent gun-control laws, but were overall much
more violent than the U.S.
Indeed,
information on Handgun Control's Center
to Prevent Handgun Violence website actually
praises Australia and attempts to portray Australia as a much safer country
following strict gun-control measures passed by lawmakers in 1996.
"The next time a
credulous friend or acquaintance tells you that Australia actually suffered
more crime when they got tougher on guns ... offer him a Foster's, and tell
him the facts," the CPHV site says.
"In 1998, the rate
at which firearms were used in murder, attempted murder, assault, sexual
assault and armed robbery went down. In that year, the last for which
statistics are available, the number of murders involving a firearm declined
to its lowest point in four years," says CPHV.
However, the
International Crime Victims Survey notes that overall crime victimization
Down Under rose from 27.8 percent of the population in 1988, to 28.6 percent
in 1991 to over 30 percent in 1999.
Advocates of less gun
control in the U.S. say the drop in gun murder rates was more than offset by
the overall victimization increase. Also, they note that Australia leads the
ICVS report in three of four categories -- burglary (3.9 percent of the
population), violent crime (4.1 percent) and overall victimization (about 31
percent).
Australia is second to
England in auto theft (2.1 percent).
In March 2000, WorldNetDaily
reported that since Australia's widespread gun ban,
violent crime had increased in the country.
WND reported that,
although lawmakers responsible for passing the ban promised a safer country,
the nation's crime statistics tell a different story:
- Countrywide,
homicides are up 3.2 percent.
- Assaults are up 8.6
percent.
- Amazingly, armed
robberies have climbed nearly 45 percent.
- In the Australian
state of Victoria, gun homicides have climbed 300 percent.
- In the 25 years
before the gun bans, crime in Australia had been dropping steadily.
- There has been a
reported "dramatic increase" in home burglaries and assaults
on the elderly.
Source:
WorldNet Daily |