Young people in Singapore carrying weapons as ‘fashion accessory': Counsellor
Some of these weapons can be found for sale on platforms like Carousell, Telegram and Facebook. PHOTOS: SCREENSHOTS FROM SHOPEE, CAROUSELL
SINGAPORE - Young people may be carrying weapons in public as a 'fashion accessory', and brandishing them during heated arguments, a counsellor who works with at-risk youth flagged.
Mr Narasimman Tivasiha Mani, co-founder of the charity Impart, said he has seen an increasing number of young people carrying weapons as accessories in the last 10 years.
'Some of these weapons look quite nice, so (young people) buy them and carry them around to show off,' he said.
Mr Narasimman, who said some of the weapons can be found on sale on platforms like Carousell, Telegram and Facebook, added that they would be used when these young people get into confrontations with others.
His comments come in the wake of a spate of incidents over the last year that saw young people linked to violent crimes.
In March, a 16-year-old was convicted of rioting with a deadly weapon after he brandished a flick knife at another teen during a group attack, which involved five others aged 13 to 17.
The teen, who has yet to be sentenced , had asked the victim if he wanted to 'try the knife'.
In September 2024, a 22-year-old man was charged with murder after a brawl in Kitchener Road. Three other men and two women were charged with rioting with a deadly weapon over the same incident.
In June 2024, a 19-year-old was charged with voluntarily causing hurt with a dangerous weapon. He had allegedly slashed a 20-year-old man with a chopper during a fight in Sembawang.
Mr Amalraj Thevar Manivannan, 27, is a friend of Mr Dhinessh Vasie, who died in the Kitchener Road brawl.
'He was so young and there was so much ahead for him,' said Mr Amalraj of the 25-year-old victim.
A father of a three-month-old girl, Mr Amalraj said he is concerned that young people may be carrying weapons in public.
' My worry is when my daughter starts going to school. Will there be enough advocacy against violence and use of such weapons, or will things be worse?' he said.
Official figures from 2019 to 2023 show that the number of offenders aged 10 to below 21 involved in offences under the Corrosive and Explosive Substances and Offensive Weapons Act had climbed from 92 to 133.
Offences under the Corrosive and Explosive Substances and Offensive Weapons Act involved mainly youth who were seen with offensive weapons such as knives.
The Straits Times checked and found weapons like karambit knives sold on online platforms like Carousell and Shopee, many with intricate designs and videos demonstrating how they could be used.
The karambit knife is a scheduled weapon.
Possession of a scheduled weapon – which includes flick knives, gravity knives and knuckle dusters – without lawful authority can result in a jail term of up to five years, with a minimum of six strokes of the cane for a first conviction.
Mr Narasimman said the use of weapons in the gaming world can play a part in influencing a young person to carry a weapon in real life.
'It becomes a thing for them to have a weapon, because in the game, a weapon increases the chance of them winning the fight. It conditions them to think that violence is an option,' he added.
MP for Ang Mo Kio GRC Darryl David had raised the issue in Parliament in September 2024 after a spate of rioting cases involving young people aged below 21 and deadly weapons.
Minister for Home Affairs K. Shanmugam said in a written reply that there was an average of 10 cases of rioting with deadly weapons every year between 2019 and 2023.
Slightly more than half involved offenders below 21 years of age.
Speaking with ST, Mr David said young people may be influenced by violent content they are watching on social media.
'When they have all this unfiltered content coming through without proper guidance, it could lead to acts of violence in real life.
'(The acts of violence) might also be due to the lack of adequate social and familial structures, and inability to manage anger, frustration and unhappiness,' he said .
Mr Narasimman said young people lack emotional regulation because their brains are not fully developed.
'Their executive functioning skills (at that age) might be poor, so they tend to act based on their emotions. Impulsivity is a huge trait among young people who use weapons.
'They don't know what to do when they feel threatened, and their need to fight back is strong, so they resort to using weapons,' he said, adding that childhood trauma and negative influences from friends might also contribute to their violent tendencies.
Mr David said educators and counsellors can help young people navigate the plethora of information available to them.
'As an educator, I believe that we've never had a generation exposed to so much information, with so little maturity.
'It's a very dangerous combination,' said Mr David, who was formerly deputy director of Temasek Polytechnic's School of Design.
He said more can be done to show young people that there are other avenues to share their fears and anxieties.
'With youth, we need to help them learn how to deal with fear and anxiety, and prevent these emotions from manifesting in acts of violence. We can teach them to manage their feelings, and find healthy channels for release,' he said.
When counselling at-risk youth, Mr Narasimman focuses on understanding their backgrounds and teaching them how to regulate their emotions.
These include equipping them with coping skills such as breathing exercises or clenching their fists to help them calm down in moments of anger.
As incidents of violence most commonly involve males, part of Mr Narasimman's work involves reshaping these young people's narratives of what it means to be a man.
He added: 'Many of them have been told not to cry, because boys must be harder and stronger.
'But when these youth are not in touch with their emotions, they bottle it up, and it may eventually burst.'
Claudia Tan is a journalist at The Straits Times covering the crime and court beat.
Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
30 minutes ago
- Straits Times
UK bans Palestine Action under anti-terrorism laws
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather in protest against Britain's Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's plans to proscribe the \"Palestine Action\" group in the coming weeks, in London, Britain, June 23, 2025. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy Police officers detain a protester as pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather in protest against Britain's Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's plans to proscribe the \"Palestine Action\" group in the coming weeks, in London, Britain, June 23, 2025. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy Police officers block a street as pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather in protest against Britain's Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's plans to proscribe the \"Palestine Action\" group in the coming weeks, in London, Britain, June 23, 2025. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy LONDON - Britain said on Monday it would ban Palestine Action under anti-terrorism laws, making it a criminal offence to belong to the pro-Palestinian campaign group which last week damaged two UK military planes in protest at London's support for Israel. The so-called proscription of Palestine Action puts the group on a par with Hamas, al-Qaeda or ISIS under British law, banning anyone from promoting the group, arranging meetings or carrying its logo in public. Those breaching the rules could face up to 14 years in jail. Palestine Action has regularly targeted defence firms and other companies in Britain linked to Israel since the start of the conflict in Gaza in 2023. Two of its members entered a Royal Air Force base in central England on Friday, spraying paint into the engines of the Voyager aircraft and further damaging them with crowbars, in the group's most high-profile move to date. It has said that Britain was an "active participant" in the conflict in Gaza, citing military support it provides to Israel. Interior minister Yvette Cooper said in a statement on Monday that the draft proscription order will be laid before Parliament on June 30 and would become law after it goes through the parliamentary process. Earlier on Monday, the group changed the location of a planned protest after police banned it from staging a demonstration outside parliament, otherwise a popular location for protests in support of a range of causes. Palestine Action's members are alleged to have caused millions of pounds of criminal damage, police have said. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
44 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Thailand targets Cambodian scam centres as border dispute rages
Ms Paetongtarn said Bangkok will restrict border crossings to Cambodia across seven provinces, and halt exports of goods including fuel. PHOTO: REUTERS BANGKOK – Thailand announced a raft of security and trade measures to cripple transnational crime syndicates in Cambodia, as Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra seeks an upper hand in a simmering border dispute with its neighbour. Bangkok will restrict border crossings to Cambodia across seven provinces, and halt exports of goods including fuel that abet transnational criminal activities, Ms Paetongtarn told reporters on June 23 after chairing a meeting of officials and security agencies. Bangkok will coordinate its efforts with foreign governments and international organisations to dismantle the criminal hub that's estimated to generate more than 600 billion baht (S$23.53 billion) a year, she said. The crackdown comes in the wake of a political crisis triggered by Ms Paetongtarn's comments in a leaked phone call with former Cambodian leader Hun Sen, which caused a key party to quit her coalition, reducing its majority in Parliament. She has since vowed to deal more firmly with Cambodia in the border stand-off. The border row has escalated, with the two countries curbing trade and people's mobility in tit-for-tat moves since an exchange of gunfire between troops in May. Cambodia suspended imports of Thai fuel and gas from June 23 after the Thai army closed one of the border crossings. The measures targeting scam centres follow similar efforts earlier in 2025, when Thailand cut off electricity, internet access and fuel supplies to some areas in Myanmar suspected to house cyber scam operations. Thailand and Cambodia had also jointly dismantled a scam centre that housed hundreds of trafficked foreign workers in casino city Poipet. Across South-east Asia, the billion-dollar cyber scam operations have been expanding, particularly in Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar. They are often run by Chinese fugitives who fled their home nation in 2020 following a domestic crackdown. Earlier in 2025, thousands of workers were rescued from scam centres in Myanmar in a multinational crackdown that also included China. 'The criminal networks in Myanmar have resettled in Cambodia, so we need tighter measures to prevent Thais being scammed in the future,' Ms Paetongtarn said. As part of the crackdown, Thailand will ban foreign tourists from crossing over to Cambodia and curb air travel to Siem Reap for gambling purposes, Ms Paetongtarn said. Thai law enforcement agencies will ramp up inspection of so-called mule accounts and financial transactions of call centre gangs, and suspend all internet services and undersea internet gateways used by Cambodia's military and security agencies. Thailand will also impose sanctions on transnational criminals with money-laundering activities and seize or freeze their assets transferred abroad, according to Ms Paetongtarn. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Paul Pogba says he is talking to a club about comeback after ban
Paul Pogba is hoping to put three chaotic years behind him. PHOTO: REUTERS Paul Pogba says he is talking to a club about comeback after ban PARIS – Former France midfielder Paul Pogba, who wants to resume his career after a doping ban, said on French television on June 22 he is 'talking' with a club, which sources close to him said was Monaco. The 32-year-old also said he had re-established contact with his brother Mathias, sentenced to a year in prison last December for his involvement in a plot to extort €13 million (S$19.3 million) from the 2018 World Cup winner. Pogba, who played for Manchester United and Juventus, is hoping to put three chaotic years behind him. Pogba suffered through repeated injuries and patchy form that led to his departure from United in 2022. He returned for a second stint at Juventus, where his problems continued. He failed a drugs test after a game in Italy in August 2023 and was handed a four-year doping ban, which was reduced 18 months on appeal. It ended in March. 'It was very, very hard,' he said. He said he was 'talking' to a club, which multiple sources said was Ligue 1 giants Monaco. Pogba said he was determined 'to get back on the pitch, mentally ready, physically ready, it's just a matter of time'. The extortion case involving six men linked to Pogba shocked France because the perpetrators included three childhood friends and his own brother. The five other defendants were found guilty of extortion, kidnapping and detention, as well as participation in a criminal association and sentenced to up to eight years in prison. All six were also fined. Pogba said he was talking to Mathias, who is being allowed to serve his sentence wearing an electronic bracelet, rather than behind bars. 'We are in contact. We've spoken, among ourselves, with the family,' Paul Pogba said. 'It's a blood bond. There was a scar, of course. We're moving forward. Only time can give us answers.' 'All we want is to always be united as a family. That's the most important thing. It's hard. Of course, it's very hard, I'm not going to lie. I was hurt. It's not the same as before, but we're in touch,' he added. Paul Pogba was held at gunpoint in 2022 by two hooded men who demanded money. He said on June 22 that he was initially willing to pay but 'afterwards, I cracked,' he said, deciding 'to speak out, even if it meant dying' and refusing 'to throw away my money like that'. He said the ban and the court case had changed him. 'I learned a lot during this period,' Pogba said. 'I did a lot of cleaning around myself too. I am also much closer to my family, my children.' AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.