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The image is a line chart titled "IELTS Essay: Crime in the City Center" showing changes in three different areas of crime in New Port city center from 2003 to 2012. Three crime categories are displayed: Burglary, Car theft, and Robbery (theft from the person), with data points for each year from 2003 to 2012. Burglary starts at roughly 3750 incidents in 2003, decreasing to about 3500 in 2004, rising to almost 3750 in 2005, then decreasing steadily to around 600 in 2012. Car theft starts at 3500 incidents in 2003, decreases to roughly 3000 in 2004, fluctuates close to 2750 from 2005 to 2007, rises slightly to 3000 in 2008, then falls steadily to around 1500 in 2012. Robbery (theft from the person) begins at just below 1000 incidents in 2003, remains stable until a rise to approximately 1200 in 2006, then falls steadily to around 200 in 2012. The horizontal axis denotes the years, with specific years marked as 2003 through 2012, while the vertical axis documents the number of incidents from 0 to 4000 in increments of 500.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph illustrates the changes in the number of reported cases of burglary, car theft, and robbery in Newport city centre between 2003 and 2012.
Overall, burglary and car theft were significantly more common than robbery, which remained the least frequent offence throughout the period. While burglary showed a sharp decline after an early peak, car theft fluctuated moderately, and robbery displayed only minor variations.
In 2003, burglary was the most prevalent crime, with approximately 3,400 incidents. This rose to a peak of about 3,800 in 2004 before dropping dramatically to just over 1,000 cases in 2008. After this steep fall, burglary remained relatively stable, with little change through to 2012.
Car theft began at roughly 2,800 cases in 2003, increased slightly to nearly 2,900 in 2004, and then fell to just above 2,000 by 2006. Following this decline, the number of car thefts gradually recovered to around 2,700 by the end of the period. Robbery consistently recorded the lowest figures, rising from about 700 cases in 2003 to a peak of roughly 900 in 2005, before decreasing steadily to approximately 500 incidents by 2012.
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