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Posted: 10 June 2004 | Subscribe Online


Antisocial behaviour orders. Overdue or over the top?

Tomas Foley, care leaver
I am 23 and left care at 17. I live in a block of nine flats, one is a crack house, one sells cocaine, one is a sex offender. That is our typical accommodation. Many of us live in fear of violence, intimidation or burglary. If ASBOs could protect us then I welcome them. But they are not meant to assist vulnerable groups but instead to capture the votes of adult conservatives.

Angie Lawrence, single parent
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ASBOs can be effective in the short term but they often simply move the problem elsewhere. I live in a rough area of Greater Manchester which has three times more ASBOs than anywhere else. But they've changed little and I think Sure Start has done much more to address key issues such as bad parenting which are at the root of it all.

Peggy Hatcher, pensioner
Some youths can be absolute pests. I don't live in the best of areas and I know a lot of older people in my block are frightened of going out at night. But youngsters hanging around are very threatening and I know people who have been jostled into the road by gangs - in one case a group of young girls. If ASBOs can stop that sort of thing then I support them.
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Alex Williams, mental health service survivor
A curfew might seem draconian but to anyone who has been on the receiving end of "low level" crime it could provide a solution. In some cases ASBOs may be a good thing; in others they further disadvantaging people with multiple problems, for example a family on benefits evicted due to a teenager with behavioural problems.


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