More than 300 arrested for suspected stalking in Northern Ireland in two years
PSNI officers have made the first successful application for a Stalking Protection Order.
More than 300 people have been arrested for alleged stalking offences in Northern Ireland in two years.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said between April 2022 and March 31 2024 officers arrested 312 alleged stalkers. Of those 150 were charged.
Most of the arrests were made in Belfast (69), followed by Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon (38), Newry, Mourne and Down (34), Derry City and Strabane (32), Antrim and Newtownabbey (30), Fermanagh and Omagh (22), while 19 of the arrests were made in both Mid Ulster and Mid and East Antrim.
Meanwhile, 18 of the arrests were made in Lisburn and Castlereagh, 17 in Ards and North Down and 14 in Causeway Coast and Glens.
At the start of National Stalking Awareness Week on Monday, the PSNI also said that since October 2023, officers have made the first successful application for a Stalking Protection Order to safeguard victims and put prohibitions on alleged perpetratorsâ behaviours.
Detective Superintendent Lindsay Fisher described stalking as an âinsidious crime that takes over and destroys livesâ.
âWe are asking the public to not ignore the red flags. If someoneâs behaviour towards you is fixated, obsessive, unwanted and repeated, this is stalking,â she said.
âI think many people when they hear the word âstalkingâ will think of someone lurking in the shadows. Stalking can actually take many forms and can be online as well as in person and could be someone known to you or a complete stranger.
âIt is an insidious crime that takes over and destroys lives. Statistics show that people will suffer up to 100 incidents before reporting to police.
âIt often results in fear, trauma and a reduction in the victimâs quality of life. In some tragic cases it has resulted in murder.
âStalking is a crime, which will not be tolerated or accepted within our communities.
âThousands of our officers and staff have now been trained to recognise and respond to these crimes and we will continue to use every tool at our disposal to bring offenders to justice.
âWe are making weekly arrests and the Stalking Protection Orders are allowing our officers to take swift and decisive action, putting restrictions in place and enforcing breaches, treating them as criminal offences.â
The PSNI have described red flags of a stalker as including regularly following someone and tracking their movements, repeatedly going uninvited to their home or workplace, checking someoneâs internet use, email or other communications, hanging around somewhere they know the person often visits, interfering with their property, watching or spying on someone and identity theft (buying things in someoneâs name).
The PSNI has urged if someone is experiencing any of the above or is worried about a loved one who may be being stalked to report to the police on 101 or to call 999 in an emergency.
The National Stalking Helpline can be contacted on 0808 8020300.



