Sunday People

12,000 PUPILS EXCLUDED FOR DRINK & DRUGS

County Lines blamed

- By Dan Warburton feedback@people.co.uk

A RECORD number of kids are being shut out of school over drugs and booze - with the blame laid on County Lines gangs.

Criminal groups recruiting and threatenin­g youngsters have sent the number of exclusions soaring by almost a FIFTH in one year.

And Tory MPS are under fire for failing to heed warnings that vile crooks are exploiting vulnerable children.

Figures obtained by us show pupils over 12 are being sent home at unpreceden­ted rates for breaching drugs and alcohol rules.

In the last complete school year of 2018- 19 there were 12,079 exclusions for turning up drunk or high, dealing drugs or abusing prescripti­on medication. A shocking 11,410 were temporary suspension­s and 669 permanent expulsions.

That compared to 10,308 exclusions in 2017-18, when there were 9,687 were suspension­s and 621 expulsions. The figures for last year were a record, with suspension­s up 17 per cent and expulsions up 7 per cent.

In the same period cops arrested around 50 children a week on suspicion of dealing drugs.

The figures come amid an explosion of County Lines gangs who exploit kids to ship drugs miles away from their bases – making up to £800,000 profit in a year.

Fiona Spargo-mabbs, whose son Daniel died at 16 after taking ecstasy in 2014, called the figures “really, really worrying”.

Fiona, founder of drugs education charity the Daniel SpargoMabb­s Foundation, said: “Vulnerable kids are so much more vulnerable when they are not in school.”

Paul North of drug policy think tank Volteface said: “It is becoming m more common for Co County Lines gangs to u use kids. But it’s important that these kids are treated as vulnerable instead of t hem being criminalis­ed.” Junior Smart, founder of the St Giles Trust-run SOS Gangs Project, said: “There is a clear interconne­ction between County Lines and school exclusions.”

Christophe­r Mcgovern of the Campaign for Real Education said: “There has been a breakdown of order in some schools.”

Shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-symonds blamed Tory cuts to police and support services for the rise in County Lines.

The Education Department said it supported any decision to suspend or expel pupils.

FEARS: Drugs crusader Fiona

CLAMPDOWN: Cops during a raid on a County Lines set-up

 ??  ?? A LESSON TO LEARN Kids kicked out of class are prey to gangs. Photo posed by model
A LESSON TO LEARN Kids kicked out of class are prey to gangs. Photo posed by model

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