Glamorgan Gazette

Share your views with Government

-

THE Welsh Government has recently launched a consultati­on to gather the public’s views before it decides whether to remove from law the defence of “reasonable punishment” in cases of assault against children.

The debate around this issue has traditiona­lly been characteri­sed as politician­s wishing to impose a “smacking ban” on parents. For the NSPCC the issue is very clearly about achieving equal protection for children under the law.

Currently, an adult facing prosecutio­n for striking a child in their care has available a common law defence that the assault was reasonable punishment of the child. This defence is not available in cases of assault against an adult and it means that one group in society – children – has less legal protection than others.

For the NSPCC, putting right this inconsiste­ncy is about fairness, equality, consistenc­y and common sense. We have long campaigned for this change, which we hope will bring Wales in line with more than 50 c countries.

It is wrong that a defence which does not exist in a case of common assault against an adult can be used to justify striking a child and it is wrong that children are the only people who it is acceptable to hit in certain circumstan­ces.

The majority of parents do not want to use physical punishment on children and the NSPCC is h here to help parents who want to develop different ways of dealing with difficult behaviour. Our Take 5 campaign provides guidance on how to deal w with challengin­g situations positively.

For more informatio­n about the consultati­on see: https://consultati­ons.gov.wales/consultati­ons/legislativ­e-proposalre­move-defencerea­sonable-punishment Des Mannion, Head of NSPCC Cymru/ Wales

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom