Slight rise in transphobic hate crime in Greater Manchester

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now
Greater Manchester saw more hate crimes committed against transgender people in 2022-23 than during the year before, new figures show.

The Home Office says public discussion by political leaders and the media could be behind a rise in transphobic hate crime across the country.

New figures from the Home Office show Greater Manchester Police recorded 333 hate crimes against transgender people in the year to March – a slight rise from 320 in 2021-22.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

This follows the national trend – the data also shows an 11 per cent rise in anti-transgender offences across England and Wales, with more than 4,700 crimes recorded in 2022-23.

New figures from the Home Office show Greater Manchester Police recorded 333 hate crimes against transgender people in the year to March – a slight rise from 320 in 2021-22.New figures from the Home Office show Greater Manchester Police recorded 333 hate crimes against transgender people in the year to March – a slight rise from 320 in 2021-22.
New figures from the Home Office show Greater Manchester Police recorded 333 hate crimes against transgender people in the year to March – a slight rise from 320 in 2021-22.
Read More
Cars towed away by police in Wigan for ‘multiple offences’

Responding to the figures, LGBTQ+ group Stonewall criticised political leaders for not having acted "seriously or quickly enough" against hate crime.

The charity further added: "Many of them are filling the public domain with toxic language that dehumanises LGBTQ+ people".

In its write-up of the statistics, the Home Office said: "Transgender issues have been heavily discussed by politicians, the media and on social media over the last year, which may have led to an increase in these offences, or more awareness in the police in the identification and recording of these crimes."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Greater Manchester Police recorded 11,642 hate crimes in 2022-23 – down from 13,117 the year before.

Among these, 8,343 offences (72 per cent ) were motivated by race or ethnicity, 1,813 (16 per cent ) by sexual orientation, 867 (seven per cent ) by religious belief, while 1,192 crimes (10 per cent ) were against those with disabilities.

Individual offences can have more than one motivating factor.

Last year saw the first recorded drop in hate crime offences across England and Wales – falling from 153,500 in 2021-22 to 145,200 in the year to March.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

These figures do not include Devon and Cornwall Police, which could not provide figures because of an issue with a new IT system.

Victim Support – a charity for those impacted by crime and abuse – suggested declining trust in police forces across the country could be responsible for the drop in police-recorded hate crimes.

Becca Rosenthal, national hate crime lead at the charity, said: "Those we support increasingly tell us that they are reluctant to approach the police, so these figures could simply reflect less people reporting to the police. Given this, independent support services for victims have never been more important."

A spokesperson for the Home Office said there is "no place for hate in our society" and the Government remains "committed to ensuring these abhorrent offences are stamped out".

They added: "We are pleased there has been an overall reduction in hate crimes recorded by police, and the numbers of sexual orientation, race and disability hate crimes all fell. But any instance is one too many.

"We expect the police to fully investigate these hateful attacks and make sure the cowards who commit them feel the full force of the law."