Figures show fall in some crime, says London mayor

Sir Sadiq Khan on a recent patrol with Met Police officers
- Published
Sir Sadiq Khan has admitted there is a "long way to go" when it comes to fighting crime in London, despite figures suggesting a potential drop in some serious offences.
The mayor says new City Hall data shows knife crime dropped by 19% between April and June this year compared with the same period last year, while the number of residential burglaries, personal thefts and personal robberies also fell.
However, some offences, such as possession of weapons, rape and drug trafficking, all increased in that period.
Overall recorded crime has increased by 31.5 % in the Metropolitan Police area of London in the last 10 years, with violent crime increasing by 40%, according to official crime data., external
The data from the Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime - which is not yet publicly available - appears to show annual falls in:
Theft from a person from 25,272 to 21,937 (13%)
Robbery of personal property from 7,106 to 6,209 (13%)
Residential burglary from 7,974 to 7,144 (10%)
The mayor of London said: "The latest figures show robbery, theft, residential burglary and knife crime are down in London, but there's still a long way to go before I'm satisfied.
"Backed with record funding from City Hall, the Met is putting high-visibility policing at the heart of fighting crime."
'Crime is up'
According to the Office for National Statistics, many crimes recorded against people increased between the years ending June 2015 and March 2025, including violence against the person (40%), possession of offensive weapons (23%), sexual offences (75%) and theft from the person (207%).
Reform UK Assembly Member Alex Wilson told the Local Democracy Reporting Service : "If Sadiq Khan thinks London is getting more safe, he needs to get out more.
"The idea he points to incremental changes in just a few categories is ridiculous."
"The long-term trends under Sadiq Khan are clear: knife crime is up, theft is up, shoplifting is up, fare evasion is up, phone thefts at the highest ever seen, and just 2% of burglaries in outer London result in a charge or summons.
The analysis of the figures comes soon after the Metropolitan Police laid out proposals to close almost half of police station front counters in London - a move critics said would have a "devastating" impact on Londoners.
The Met's commissioner, Sir Mark Rowley, has said despite funding increases, the forces faces a £260m shortfall and will have to reduce its workforce.
However, he said the force was becoming "more capable" and was focused on "driving down crime on issues that matter most to Londoners".
The Mayor of London has pledged a policing blitz on London's 20 most blighted town centres for shoplifting, robbery, knife crime and antisocial behaviour this summer.
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