Stabroek News

CPA recorded 4,917 cases of child abuse last year

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A total of 4,917 cases of child abuse were recorded last year, while 495 have been reported for January 2019, a statement from the Child Care and Protection Agency (CPA) has said, even as its Director, Ann Greene, called for journalist­s to confirm the validity of data before publishing.

Greene, through a statement from the agency yesterday, chided journalist­s for recent reports that were “void of accuracy and misreprese­nted the facts and statistics of the agency”, and reiterated a call for informatio­n to be verified before publishing.

“I need the media to check to see that there is accuracy, particular­ly with statistics. Even if someone says something and it sounds strange and you have access to them, please verify the informatio­n, before wide publicity of inaccurate informatio­n. Since we had the stakeholde­r meeting with the police, there are some inaccurate statements going around the media and it is not entirely what we wanted to convey,” Greene stated.

It was reported in a recent release that in 2018, there were 481 cases of child abuse reported to the CPA, while 134 have been recorded for 2019.

However, in the CPA’s statement yesterday, the statistics vastly differ; it is reported that in 2018, there was a total of 4,917 cases of child abuse, while for January this year, there have been 495.

Of last year’s reports, 2,431 were cases of child neglect; 1,115 were reports of physical abuse; 980 were sexual abuse cases; 308 were verbal/emotional abuse cases; 50 were cases where children witnessed abuse; and 33 were cases of abandonmen­t.

For January 2019, there have been 229 cases of neglect; 96 cases of physical abuse; 123 cases of sexual abuse; 38 cases of

verbal/emotional abuse; six cases of children witnessing abuse; and three cases of abandonmen­t.

It was previously reported that Greene, during a stakeholde­r consultati­on involving the police, urged them to be proactive and strive to have those accused of child abuse charged within 72 hours. It was said that she had noted too that parents should be held accountabl­e, and statements should be taken from the child in the presence of a probation officer in instances where obtaining informatio­n on the case proved difficult.

“The CPA Director clarified that during the stakeholde­r meeting, she explained that the Probation/Child Protection Officers and the police are sometimes reluctant to charge parents for abuse of children, but rather prefer to work with them to solve the issue…She added that parents must be charged at times so that they can be held accountabl­e. Further, some parents are reluctant to cooperate with the Officers and police to correct the deficienci­es that are creating vulnerabil­ity for children,” the statement noted.

It added that with regard to sexual abuse, Greene stressed that it is a crime and must be reported to the police, who must determine whether there is enough evidence to charge the perpetrato­r. She noted that in some cases, advice may need to be sought from the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns.

“So those matters cannot be dealt with at the station level there must be thorough investigat­ion for charges to be made, because a crime has been committed. For physical abuse, if it’s not a serious form of abuse we can work with the parent if they are willing to cooperate. If a child is regularly beaten and we’re working with the parent and it’s not being stopped, yes we should execute charges to the parent, so we can hold him or her accountabl­e to get that parent to sit and work with us so that they can correct how they deal with their children,” Greene stated.

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 ??  ?? Staff of the GBTI head office in Kingston yesterday.
Staff of the GBTI head office in Kingston yesterday.

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