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Linking hoodies to hoodlums, English banning the shirts
Associated Press
Published June 1, 2005
LONDON - Britain has a new public enemy: the teenager in a hooded sweat shirt.
Hoods, no longer just an adolescent fashion statement, lie at the center of a debate over what many, including Prime Minister Tony Blair, see as an alarming rise in bad behavior.
Blair says rowdy public drunkenness, noisy neighbors, petty street crime, even graffiti and vandalism are top priorities. He is enthusiastically backing an English shopping mall's ban on hoods, baseball caps and other headgear that obscure the face.
"It is time to reclaim the streets for the decent majority," Blair told the House of Commons.
"People are rightly fed up with street-corner and shopping-center thugs ... binge drinking that makes our town centers no-go areas for respectable citizens," the prime minister said.
Several public places have banned hoods since the Bluewater mall in Kent, eastern England, got publicity for doing so in May.
Mina Salani, 41, said she feels more comfortable working at a hair accessory stall at the Elephant and Castle mall in south London since it banned hoods. Some teens shoplifted in hoods, knowing their faces would be hidden from security cameras, she said.
"They look frightening," Salani said.
A few teens in a group hanging out at the mall had hooded shirts but kept their heads bare. They said they knew their hoods scared some people, but insisted they meant no harm and wore them only to keep warm or in style.
"Because you've got a hoodie on, people pull their bag closer, they take a few steps away," said Goonda Hassan, 21. "They think everybody who wears a hoodie is a thief."
Blair has been highlighting the issue of boorish behavior for years. In 1998, he pushed through legislation empowering courts to ban any number of antisocial activities, including shouting, swearing, spray-painting, playing loud music or simply associating with the wrong people.
Blair is "in touch with a core middle England anxiety," said Paul Skidmore of the London think tank Demos. His support for the hood ban "has clearly resonated with people."
Not everyone is at peace with it, however.
The Association of Chief Police Officers says it doesn't know whether hooded teens are committing more crimes than other groups.
[Last modified June 1, 2005, 00:39:12]
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