Grieving mother calls for end to London bloodshed

Pretana Morgan’s 17-year-old son died in Kennington amid a weekend of violence in the capital

A mother has pleaded for an end to the bloodshed in London after her teenage son was shot dead amid another wave of violent crime in the capital.

Rhyhiem Ainsworth Barton, 17, was killed and three other people were shot but survived over the weekend.

In Wealdstone, north-west London, two boys aged 13 and 15 sustained head injuries, and in Lewisham, in the south of the capital, a 22-year-old was shot. None have life-threatening injuries.

A 43-year-old man was stabbed in Perivale, north-west London, on Sunday and two men and a boy were taken to hospital after an acid attack in Hackney in east London.

Barton’s mother, Pretana Morgan, called for the violence to end. “Let my son be the last and be an example to everyone,” she said. “Just let it stop. What must be, must be.

“It’s not about race, it’s not about nation, it’s not about culture. Nothing. It’s just a human race. Just one human race. So children, please let my son be the last.”

She said her son was not in a gang and he had been “trying to make a difference” by learning to work with children. He was also an aspiring architect and had “so much potential”, Morgan said.

Paramedics and police were called to reports of gunshots on Cooks Road in Kennington in south London on Saturday at just after 6pm. Rhyhiem was found on nearby Warham Street with a gunshot injury.

His death is the latest in a spate of violent crimes in the capital. Police are investigating more than 60 alleged murders since the start of the year.

Last month, in one of her last actions as home secretary, Amber Rudd launched a serious violence strategy to clamp down on violent crime, which has been rising since 2014.

The strategy is to be backed by £40m of Home Office funding and a new offensive weapons bill to ban the sale of corrosive liquids to under-18s and introduce tougher restrictions on buying knives online. It will focus heavily on the links between illegal drug markets, particularly for crack cocaine, and violent crime.

The strategy was launched amid controversy over the potential link between dwindling police numbers and the rise in violence.

Police have said extra patrols will be working on bank holiday Monday to keep the capital’s streets safe.

DCS Simon Messinger said officers were using search powers to seize knives and to stop cars carrying weapons.