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Your Letters
 
Unity is the only way forward in tackling our youths' problems

• Last week I wrote to extend my sympathies to all the families caught up in recent tragic events on the streets of Camden (A terrible waste of young lives, February 2).

I pledged then that the council would do what it could to provide support and promote unity among the communities affected.
The issue of unity is particularly pertinent to the Somali community at the moment – because of the devastating murder of 18-year-old Mahir Osman, but also because of media coverage about fighting among Somali youths.
While the police continue working to see justice delivered, I want to update your readers on some of the initial steps the council has taken to work with the Somali community and help them, and the rest of the borough, move forward from this tragic event.
Council officers and police attended a pre-arranged meeting of the Somali Forum last Wednesday (February 1) and a meeting of Somali youth last Friday (February 3) and we plan to meet with representatives again in the very near future. Together with our partners in schools, the health service and the police, the council has been offering targeted help to the Somali community, particularly its young people, for some time.
In addition to mainstream youth provision, more targeted activities have included supporting the Somali Youth Development Centre; detached youth workers on the streets; employing a Somali street warden to engage young people in sporting activities, and Somali youth workers as positive role models.
In addition Somali link workers are based at three secondary schools (South Camden Community School, Hampstead and Haverstock School) to work with young people and their families. They provide support and advice to both young people and family and refer them to other agencies if necessary.
We want to work in partnership with the Somali community to address the needs of their young people – and this is what last week’s meetings were about. Together with community leaders and the young people themselves, we are identifying the issues that affect them, and ways that we can offer practical help in the short, medium and long term.
There have been calls in the media for more youth clubs, but I truly believe that youth clubs alone are not the answer. All children and young people need more than somewhere to go and hang out with their friends for a couple of hours and those at risk of offending need dedicated, specialised help and support. Clearly, the authorities cannot deal with these issues without the aid of the community. But together, we can succeed in tackling the sort of problems, which led to the death of Mahir Osman.
We know that Somali leaders plan to meet with representatives from other boroughs to address the issue of youth tensions, and we fully support them in this action.
All of us must do everything we can to ensure that other young men and women and their families do not suffer similarly.
Councillor Raj Chada
Leader of Camden Council
Town Hall
Judd Street
WC1
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