Rural crime costs fall in South East, insurers say

Jody Sabral
BBC News, South East
BBC A warning sign to thieves tells that this farm is alarmed.BBC
Farmers have raised the alarm on rural crime

The cost of rural crime has fallen in the South East, insurers say, but quad bikes and other all-terrain vehicles remain high on thieves' shopping lists.

Rural crime costs fell by 67% in Surrey, 22% in Kent and 54.5% in West Sussex - however it increased by 51% in East Sussex, according to a new report by National Famers Union (NFU) Mutual.

The study says rural crime cost the counties about £2.7m in 2024, down from almost £4m in the previous year.

Sussex Police said: "In Sussex specifically, the cost of rural theft in 2024 has fallen by 25% compared to the previous year."

Thefts of all-terrain vehicles vehicles in a region of south-east England stretching from Oxfordshire and Hampshire to Kent cost about £548.000, which was the second highest total for one of the NFUs regions throughout the UK.

Frank Langrish, a sheep farmer from Rye, told BBC South East farmers were still being targeted, and he was spending more on security as a result.

"We've put in huge amounts of protection with CCTV and alarm system on everything we've got," he said.

"This is costing us thousands of pounds a year."

Mr Campbell, from NUF Mutual, said:" In recent years we've seen rural crime becoming increasingly organised, serious and persistent in nature, with thieves willing to pull out all the stops to get what they desire."

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