Daily Mail

Father of tragic Molly joins forces with Brianna’s mum to call for stronger social media safeguards United in grief

- Daily Mail Reporter

THE father of Molly Russell has called on Ofcom to be ‘far bolder’ on regulating technology companies after he met the mother of murdered teenager Brianna Ghey.

Ian Russell, whose 14-year-old daughter took her own life in 2017 after viewing harmful material online, said big tech firms were ‘heading in the wrong direction’.

He added that he thought it was the company’s bosses who were ‘resistant to change’.

Mr Russell told BBC Breakfast yesterday: ‘The world is waking up and realising that unless it starts to regulate big tech, nothing is going to change.

‘What we need in the UK at the moment is for Ofcom, who is the regulator appointed by the Government to take the powers of the Online Safety Act, to put them in place – we need Ofcom to be far bolder.’ He said the early signs from the consultati­on process for the Act was that Ofcom was being ‘timid and very tame’.

He added: ‘If Ofcom aren’t bolder and don’t take stronger measures to try to control these online harms then tech will race away in front of us and we’ll have this problem for far longer, and young people will be in danger for far longer.’

Mr Russell met Esther Ghey, the mother of Brianna, who was transgende­r and just 16 when she was lured to a park near Warrington and stabbed to death on February 11 last year.

During their conversati­on on Thursday, which was filmed by the BBC, Ms Ghey said: ‘I didn’t have a clue what Brianna was looking at online.

‘It was only after she was taken from us that I found out that she was accessing self-harm sites and eating disorder sites.’

Mr Russell replied: ‘I’m over six years down the road from Molly’s death and I still have bad days and hearing your story has reminded me how raw the emotions are when you’re closer to the death.’

He showed Ms Ghey a book of handwritte­n notes by Molly in which she alluded to her depression, writing: ‘Sometimes my mind is like a little boat out in the middle of the sea in a big storm. I’m alone and all the waves are closing down on me,

‘Tremendous bond between us’

drowning me.’ Mr Russell said: ‘Since Molly’s death, which is over six years ago now, I’ve met far too many families in similar situations and there’s a tremendous bond that exists between all of us.

‘ Every loss of a child is unique... But there’s a connection and I think maybe we think we can understand each other a little bit better because we’ve been through something similar.’

Ms Ghey has called for legislatio­n to help parents control what their children can access online through smartphone­s.

She said under-16s should have special ‘children’s phones’, without social media apps and with built-in software that flags to their parents if they search for troubling keywords.

 ?? ?? Candid: Esther Ghey speaks to Ian Russell, whose daughter Molly, right, took her own life
Candid: Esther Ghey speaks to Ian Russell, whose daughter Molly, right, took her own life
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