Yorkshire Post

Urgent need for Domestic Abuse Bill

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From: Steve Oversby, Director of Barnardo’s North Region.

AS the UK’s largest children’s charity, we believe that the risks to children from domestic abuse have been heightened by the coronaviru­s lockdown, with victims getting little or no respite from their abusers.

The impact of Covid-19 makes it even more important that the Domestic Abuse Bill – which had its Second Reading in the House of Commons last week

– is strengthen­ed to protect all victims including children, who are often the forgotten victims of domestic abuse.

Since the lockdown was announced on March 23, calls to the National Domestic Abuse Helpline are up by 49 per cent and domestic abuse killings are thought to have more than doubled. And when asked about the effects of the lockdown on the families they support, more than half of Barnardo’s frontline staff say they are concerned about an increase in family conflict and stress.

During the lockdown, children are hidden from the view of profession­als like teachers and health visitors, who would usually be able to report any concerns. We know a maximum of just five per cent of children known to be vulnerable are attending school.

The Bill introduces a new duty on local authoritie­s to provide support for victims in refuges. While we welcome this support, the Bill does not go far enough, and risks creating a two tier system, with the majority of victims who remain in the family home not qualifying for this protection, and potentiall­y receiving less support as a result.

With the majority of victims remaining in the family home, especially in BAME communitie­s, it is vital that Parliament extends this duty to cover all victims and children – no matter where they live.

We need the Government to ensure the Bill includes a statutory duty on public authoritie­s to provide support to all victims, including children, affected by domestic abuse.

Sadly, without the right support, children who experience domestic abuse are at risk of becoming trapped in a life-long cycle of violence. By strengthen­ing the Bill, we can make sure these children have the best possible chance of a positive future.

From: Olivier Sykes, Liverpool.

WASN’T the fantasy of ‘Brexit’ sold as a way to get rid of bureaucrac­y? So why did it emerge that up to 50,000 people will have to be recruited to carry out customs paperwork under the Government’s preferred trade deal with the EU?

And what a shameful waste of public money, especially at a time like this. To paraphrase the quote on a red bus which did the rounds before the EU referendum in 2016: “Let’s fund our NHS instead!”

From: John G Davies, Alma Terrace, East Morton, Keighley.

IT is a sad state of affairs when Professor Neil Ferguson, a world expert in epidemiolo­gy, is forced by press reports to resign from Sage for what amounts to a personal indiscreti­on. With the absence of Prof Ferguson from the committee considerab­ly weakening its expertise, one has to wonder what obscuranti­st agenda these papers have.

From: Hilary Andrews, Nursery Lane, Leeds.

IT must be very distressin­g for the families of those who have died from coronaviru­s to listen to the endless media scrutiny of whether or not the UK has had more deaths than other countries in Europe. We won’t have any reliable figures for many years as each country counts these numbers in a different way. To those grieving, none of these arguments matter one jot.

From: Peter Rickaby, Selby.

DO Government procuremen­t officials never check what they are buying? A hundred thousand items of PPE flown from Turkey courtesy of the RAF now held up in a warehouse not to be put to use – why? The NHS deems the products not up to standard. Surely someone from the British Embassy in Turkey should have inspected before purchasing? What an utter waste of public money.

From: Barry Foster, High Stakesby, Whitby.

POLITICIAN­S of every party should be sticking together. We hear a barrage of negativity. Our Prime Minister and Health Secretary have suffered the virus.

To compare now with the Second World War is a slur on those who lived, and fought, through it all from 1939-45 to give us the freedom we have. We should be on our knees to say thank you and pray for all those who have lost loved ones over the past weeks. We will come through it all.

From: Mr S Devanny, Bradford.

PERSONALLY, I think Piers Morgan is doing a good job at holding the Government to account. There has been so much misinforma­tion given to the public from day one. The UK government was far from prepared. Looking back at previous outbreaks, all government­s should have been prepared for a pandemic, yet it was not. Ministers are still playing catch up. They knew about Covid-19 last year.

From: J Hutchinson, York.

I SEE that the inquest into how the pandemic was handled has already started. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, but I believe that once we get over this difficult time, the majority of people will just want to get on with their lives and put it behind them. They will hope to have learned some lessons from the experience.

I doubt very much they will want an inquiry which will create jobs for the profession­al ‘committee people’, enabling them to drag it out for months on end.

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES ?? PIERS MORGAN: The TV presenter is doing a good job at holding the Government to account, a reader suggests.
PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES PIERS MORGAN: The TV presenter is doing a good job at holding the Government to account, a reader suggests.

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