Colin McGregor (not his real name) is unlikely to forget his
15th birthday.
‘The night I cut my hand, I was celebrating my birthday,’ he
says. ‘I told my friend I was going to burgle a house down the street because I
wanted a television set. He said I should be careful that I didn’t cut myself
smashing a window but I didn’t take proper precautions and came back bleeding. I
was scared about people’s reactions but a bit excited at the same time. But then
when I told my parents they didn’t take it well at all. All hell broke loose.’
‘Anyway this big cut in my hand needed suturing and then got
infected which meant that I was grounded and couldn’t go out with my mates
until it was properly healed. I missed out on a lot of fun having to stay at
home when they were all out having a good time. And it stopped me playing
tennis too.’
Unplanned lacerations are inevitably traumatic for the
individuals concerned but they also have a negative impact on wider society. A
report from Holyrood’s health and sport committee, published last week, calls
for a national strategy to reduce injuries from burglaries.
Controversially, it recommends starting burglary education ‘as
early as possible - pre-school even’ and making free protective leather gloves
widely available to teenagers as young as 13.
Scotland has one of the highest teenage burglary rates in Western
Europe and while teenage burglary levels are lower in Scotland than for Britain
as a whole, Scottish government targets on reducing teenage burglary have yet
to be met.
Dundee has the highest rate of teenage burglaries and those
in the most deprived areas are almost five times more likely to suffer injuries
than those in the least deprived.
While the report took care not to stigmatise teenage burglary,
it highlighted the danger of injury and the cost to the general public. Teenagers
who burgle are less likely to complete their education, more likely to live on
benefits or in poverty and more likely to experience family conflict.
Andrew Houston,
chief executive of Teenagers 1st, a charity which is broadly in favour of the
report’s recommendations, says that injured burglars fall into three groups.
‘Some injuries are
completely accidental and there is an issue with knowledge and information and
access to leather gloves but there is also an issue with doing burglaries when
they are drunk and which they regret afterwards,’ says Houston. ‘The second
group are proactive and want to injure themselves or are ambivalent but
wouldn’t mind if it happened.’
‘Often those are teenagers
who live in poverty and deprivation. They don’t have aspirations and ambitions
and they don’t feel part of anything. A scar following injury while carrying
out a burglary is often seen as something desirable. It gives them an identity.
Then there is a third group where they get injured after being led on by abusive
people.’
‘It has ever been that teenagers will experiment with
burglary,’ says Houston. ‘It is unlikely we will ever be able to stop that
entirely. We then have a choice. If young people are going to burgle is it our
preference to say, “You must not,” or do we talk about it, explain it is not
the best time to do this, support them and help them to protect themselves?’
Note: This report was
adapted from a Sunday
Times report (£). This was not originally about burglary and injuries but another
illegal activity, having sex with someone under sixteen, which runs the risk of
an unplanned pregnancy. The names have
been changed but the same government committee did actually recommend making
free protective condoms available to teenagers as young as 13.
When I did plastics there were several young men per week with ruined hands. "Punched a window" was commonplace.
ReplyDeletePerhaps we should supply them to all teenagers on a night out.
DeleteThis could have been an article from the Onion. Life imitates art in this case.
ReplyDeleteThis is the sort of satirical content that I write on my blog. I laughed out loud (because I saw what was coming at the end.) I'm flattered to find you "thinking outside the botch" too. Very whimsical, with a deadly serious point to it.
ReplyDeleteThis. This is yes. Yes yes yes. Brilliant.
ReplyDeletebrilliant brilliant brilliant
ReplyDeleteMany thanks once again Peter. Great stuff.
ReplyDelete