A West Midlands Police boss has declared knife crime “an emergency” after three teens were stabbed to death within 12 days in Birmingham.
Chief Constable Dave Thompson said stop and searches would be stepped up and more officers would patrol the streets amid the “crisis”.
There have been 269 knife crimes recorded in the city so far this year.
Police also urged more help from parents and teachers to tackle the violence among youngsters.
Mr Thompson, who was with Police and Crime Commissioner David Jamieson outside the scene of a teen stabbing at a charity shop in Birmingham, pledged extra patrols with additional officers in certain areas.
He said: “Immediate and intensive action is needed to prevent this current crisis from continuing. My officers have been given extensive powers to search people without the need to suspect they are carrying weapons.
“I recognise this will upset some innocent young people, but I fear the carriage of weapons in the current environment is growing, often through fear, and we can take no chances.
“For our young people, their families and communities we need to stop this emergency quickly. Without specific areas or people to target that means blunt action to prevent violence.”
Mr Umar was a relative of the former chief prosecutor for North West England Nazir Afzal. Mr Afzal said: “I don’t want any other family having to experience what our family has.”
‘Find the killers’
On Tuesday, police were also called after a 16-year-old boy was stabbed in the leg near a British Heart Foundation shop in Bull Street, Birmingham, at 17.30 GMT.
Officers vowed to leave “no stone unturned” after the teenager was taken to hospital and is in a “stable condition”. No arrests have been made.
A man, 29, suffered serious stab injuries to his arm, near to Aston Street, Birmingham, just after 14.30 GMT and was taken to hospital on Wednesday.
Mr Jamieson added: “We need the support of local communities to stop this violence. It is not a job the police can do alone and they can’t simply arrest their way out of this problem.”
Det Chf Superintendent Mark Payne, from the West Midlands Police homicide team, said that while investigators are doing all they can to find the killers, they need help from parents and teachers to turn the tide against knife crime.
“Knife crime and violence is not an issue we can tackle on our own. We need help from partners, parents, schools and the wider community to tackle this growing issue,” he said.
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In 2018 there were 19 stabbing fatalities – all under the age of 25 – in the West Midlands.
There have been 17 homicides in London so far this year, six of which happened in nine days.
On Tuesday alone five people were stabbed – four of whom were attacked in less than eight hours and one who died.
Patrick Green, from the Ben Kinsella Trust – a charity which campaigns against knife crime – said “nobody is doing enough” to stop it.
“If lessons are to be learned we really to get behind not just the enforcement element but also to make sure that the next group of young people don’t carry the same attitude that a knife will protect them,” he said.
Knife crime in the West Midlands
Out of 43 forces, West Midlands Police saw the third highest knife crime offences per head of population between April 2017 to March 2018, according to the Home Office.