ylop
Well-Known Member
He’s slightly paraphrased it but there is an exemption when the knife is part of national dress.Do you have a link to show your first paragraph is legal, please?
Is there any evidence that people in national or religious dress are associated with knife crimes? The law has been the same for decades and I don’t recall a single publicised case where the police said, “if only we’d been able to arrest the man in the kilt”. Whilst it provides an exemption to the posession in public problem it doesn’t mean it’s ok to use it or threaten someone with it etc.It's a mystery why these exemptions still apply in the 21st Century. A bit of consistency might be helpful.
