In the wake of the Southport killings, Keir Starmer and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper addressed the government's response. Cooper condemned the ease with which the murderer acquired a knife online at 17 and announced plans for stricter online knife sales regulations. The new measures may require buyers to provide two forms of identification, such as a passport, and include live video verification to ensure the buyer's age. Starmer criticized current practices and called for urgent action to protect children from easy access to deadly weapons.
After the tragic Southport murders, there will be stricter online knife purchasing regulations requiring two types of identification to combat easy access to weapons.
Keir Starmer emphasized that it's shockingly easy for children to access deadly knives and highlighted the need for technology to implement age-verification checks.
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