Authorities ‘must act earlier’ to help stop child exploitation
EARLIER INTERVENTIONS by schools, councils and the police are needed to stop children falling victim to criminal exploitation, the outgoing Children’s Commissioner has said.
The comments from Leedsbased Anne Longfield come after analysis of Home Office figures showed more than 3,600 children were referred to the UK’s National Referral Mechanism (NRM) as potential victims of modern slavery in the first nine months of 2020.
More than half of the 2,140 referrals were for British nationals, with 1,815 of those cases involving criminal exploitation – flags experts typically associate
“It is that longerterm protection and prevention that I want to see in place.”
with the use of children by county lines drug gangs.
Ms Longfield’s office estimated in 2019 that 34,000 children aged 10 to 17 who were victims of a violent crime in the past 12 months were either a gang member or knew a gang member.
The commissioner, who stepped down from the role last month, undertook the research – following high levels of violence involving children – to better understand how vulnerable youngsters were at risk of being recruited and criminally exploited by gangs.
But she warned that just 6,560 of these children were known to authorities – and that the remainder were slipping below the radar.
“At the moment those children don’t reach the threshold of being able to get support,” Ms Longfield said. “If they aren’t at immediate risk, the local authority may not help, the school may feel it is not their responsibility, the police will be responding to incidents when they happen, but it is that longer-term protection and prevention that I want to see in place. I have been particularly keen to draw attention to those children who fall through the gaps at school. Those who are excluded from school either temporarily or permanently and what the impact is on their vulnerability.
“When I talk to people who are running pupil referral units or alternative provision when children have been excluded from schools they so often tell me there is a high proportion of children who are involved in gangs – very often 50 per cent.
“Where there are children who are outside that school protection, those that are seeking to target them and exploit them know where to go and that is the kind of grim reality that we have seen in recent years.”
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