More honour-based abuse offences were recorded in Thames Valley last year, new data has shown.
Home Office figures show that 135 honour-based abuse (HBA) related offences were recorded by the force in the year to March.
This was an increase from 120 the year before.
Honour-based abuse is a crime or incident committed to protect or defend the "honour" of a family or community.
It can include forced marriage, domestic abuse, sexual violence, and threats to kill.
READ MORE: Dozen Thames Valley police officers sacked and barred last year
But despite a rise in Thames Valley, figures dropped across England and Wales with 2,755 recorded case, down 8 per cent from the year before.
This was also the first decrease since records began in 2020.
Of the offences last year, 111 were for female genital mutilation – up from 86 the year before.
Forced marriage offences also rose from 173 offences in 2022-23 to 201 last year.
A spokesperson for Karma Nirvana, a charity for victims and survivors of the abuse, said: "The 8 per cent decline in police-recorded HBA offences, despite a 13 per cent rise in cases handled by Karma Nirvana's national Honour Based Abuse helpline, raises significant concerns.
"This drop may indicate ongoing challenges in accurately identifying, recording, and reporting HBA within police forces, rather than an actual decrease in HBA incidents."
READ MORE: Bucks businesses ‘helpless’ as retail crime surges
They said the annual report on the offence "remains limited in scope" as it fails to capture "key details" such as the age of victims forced into marriage.
The charity urged the Government to improve data collection and called for the adoption of an honour-based abuse statutory definition alongside training for frontline officers.
The Home Office said changes in May 2023 were made to the counting for conduct crimes such as stalking, harassment and coercive and controlling behaviour.
The requirement to record two crimes when one of them was a conduct crime was removed, which has led to a reduction in offences often associated with conduct crimes, such as malicious communications.
While this may have affected the level of HBA-related offences recorded in the last year, the Home Office said it is not clear that this change is the main driver for the fall in these offences.
A Home Office spokesperson said: "'Honour-based' abuse is a serious form of abuse that nobody should have to experience, which is why we are tackling it through our mission to halve violence against women and girls within a decade.
"The Government will use every tool at its disposal to bring perpetrators to justice and ensure victims receive the support they deserve."
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here