Knife crime in England and Wales hit a record high in the year to September, up by 7% on the previous 12 months.

Police-recorded offences involving a knife or sharp instrument rose to 44,771, figures released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) on Thursday show.

This is the highest on record, up from 41,858 in the previous 12 months and 46% more than when comparable records began in the year ending March 2011 (30,620).

The figures prompted Barnardo’s chief executive Javed Khan to reiterate calls for the Government to take “urgent action” to “break the spiral of violence”.

The total number of homicides recorded by police fell by 6%, from 654 to 617.

There was also a 20% drop in homicides where a knife or sharp instrument was used, to 221 offences, mainly driven by a decrease in London.

The rise in robberies was “evident for the fourth consecutive year”, the ONS said, with a 12% increase to 82,542 offences.

Knife crime offences recorded by police in England and Wales
(PA Graphics)

The ONS report said: “While recording improvements are likely to have contributed to the rise, some of the increase is likely to reflect a real change.”

The number of crimes of violence against a person rose by 12% in the 12 months to just over 1.6 million.

Vehicle offences also rose 4% to 441,351, “continuing the rising trend seen over the last three years”, the ONS said.

But the number of burglaries recorded by police fell by 4% to 380,567 offences, while the number of gun crimes remained almost identical to the previous year at 6,144.

Criminal damage and arson fell by 2% to 531,662 offences, while criminal damage to a vehicle dropped 7% to 196,790 offences.

In total, police-recorded crime rose by 7% to almost 5.8 million.

Excluding fraud and computer misuse offences, this stood at just over five million, an increase of 5% from the previous year.

Police-recorded homicides in England and Wales
(PA Graphics)

The figures do not include Greater Manchester Police, which records data differently.

Meanwhile, separate figures also released on Thursday show the proportion of crimes in England and Wales resulting in a charge or summons has halved in four years from 14% to 7.3%, in a steady decline since records began in 2015.

This meant suspects were charged or ordered to be in court on 430,178 occasions during that time, slightly fewer but largely the same as in the previous period, according to the Home Office data.

In almost 45% more than 2.2 million cases, the investigation was completed but no suspect was identified.

In nearly a quarter of cases, more than 1.2 million, the victim did not support further action.

Last week Ministry of Justice data showed the number of knife crimes resulting in a conviction or caution was the highest in a decade.

There were 22,286 knife and offensive weapon offences formally dealt with by the criminal justice system in England and Wales in the year ending September 2019, according to the figures.

This is a 3% rise on the previous year (21,553) and the highest since September 2009 (26,364) – driven by the number of offences for possession of a knife or weapon, the report said.

The Prime Minister announced he would lead a new Cabinet committee looking at ways to tackle crime.

Boris Johnson also told ministers that every department should consider itself a criminal justice department as part of a drive to look at the “complex causes of crime” which would involve long-term reforms to improve health, social care, youth services and education.

Police-recorded robberies in England and Wales
(PA Graphics)

John Apter, national chairman of the Police Federation, said police should not be “expected to fight this crime epidemic alone”, claiming recorded crime would rise until officers get the resources they need.

He reiterated calls for “long-term, sustainable funding”, adding that cash pledges made by the Government are “a move in the right direction” but they are not enough to undo the “damage” of previous cuts.

Minister for crime and policing Kit Malthouse said the numbers are “extremely concerning” overall, with violent crime “still too high”.

He added: “We are throwing everything we have got at this issue. We all have to work together to win this fight and we won’t stop until we do.”