Boy (16) second shooting victim in 24 hours
Teenager has been discharged from hospital after being shot in leg
Last updated 18th Feb 2017
A 16-year-old boy has been shot in the leg in west Belfast.
It is the second attack in just 24 hours.
The PSNI has branded the attack as "child abuse". The teenager was taken to hospital after the shooting on Springfield Road last night.
His injuries are not believed to be life-threatening.
The incident follows a man being shot in the legs on Wednesday night on Falls Road.
The PSNI has condemned the attack and appealed for information.
Belfast Policing Commander Chief Superintendent Chris Noble said: “I want to condemn what has happened in the strongest terms. It is very early to speculate in terms of the people involved, but at the very least they are predatory criminals. It is also too early to say if the number of recent shootings in west Belfast are linked but clearly there is an active line of inquiry around the involvement of violent dissident republicans. I would not want to speculate on exactly why individuals were targeted but there is never any justification for this violent, abusive behaviour.
“Last night saw an attack on a 16-year-old boy. Any civilised society would see that for what it is – child abuse. It is most definitely not policing or community safety activity.
“There is only one police service in west Belfast and that is the PSNI. Policing only works when delivered with the community and policing in West Belfast has seen real progress over the last 5 years in relation to domestic burglary and vehicle crime in particular. Unlike others who in recent weeks have resorted to child abuse, maiming people and acting as self-appointed judges, juries and executioners, we work in partnership with the community to resolve issues of concern while at the same time being held robustly to account by the local PCSP and the Policing Board. Over the last 9 months Police have delivered on the West Belfast Local Policing Plan, set by elected and independent representatives, which has seen a significant reduction in those issues which matter to the community; anti-social behaviour, burglary, death driving and crimes against the elderly.
“We will continue to work with communities in order to bring those at fault to justice, but we need evidence and not rumour to enable us to obtain successful prosecutions. The dogs in the street may well know who is responsible but what I need as the local police Commander is for people to come forward and give me any information, however apparently irrelevant that our specialist detectives can use to secure a conviction. Information is key in these crimes where victims are often traumatised and people emerge from and run back into the shadows.
“Policing has a clear strategy for keeping people safe in West Belfast and fundamentally it is about working with communities to solve challenges and being responsive and accountable to them. A strategy of maiming and abusing local young people and intimidating communities by violent, criminal, unelected and unaccountable individuals is not a strategy.
“This is now 2017 and yet we still have criminal elements within our community who have no moral compass whatsoever and are prepared to revert to child abuse and shooting people to further their cause. These criminals and facilitators of drug dealers need to get off the backs of the community and let us get on with making things better for everyone.
“I would encourage anyone that has any information regarding the recent shooting incidents or any criminal activity in the west Belfast area to contact police immediately on 101. You can of course also pass this information to a member of the clergy or a local elected community representative who can then pass it on to police so that these matters can be fully investigated and the criminals responsible can be brought to justice.”