Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

KIDS TERRORISED BY PARAMILITA­RIES

Commission­er tells MPS more must be done to help children

- BY REBECCA BLACK newsni@mirror.co.uk

PARAMILITA­RY groups in Northern Ireland are subjecting young people to coercion, threats and sexual exploitati­on, a Westminste­r committee has heard.

The region’s Children’s Commission­er Koulla Yiasouma described both loyalist and dissident republican­s using young people “to do their dirty work”, such as drug dealing and civil disobedien­ce.

Giving evidence to the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee on the effect of paramilita­ries on society, Ms Yiasouma criticised efforts by government to address the issue as not joined up, and said police have work to do to gain confidence among some young people from deprived background­s.

She also said the current collapse of the Stormont government is not helpful, and while some faith-based groups do good work, she said she felt church leaders have not spoken out enough.

However, she stressed that the overarchin­g factor of poverty and inequaliti­es in the education system must be addressed to protect young people. Ms Yiasouma described “peaks and troughs” of paramilita­ry influence, with a spike in April 2021 during disorder in the loyalist communitie­s where young people were being ordered to take part in rioting.

Asked why young people get involved, Ms Yiasouma suggested for survival. “They do it because they need to do it to survive in their community and that’s a really important point to make, and with a threat or a fear of significan­t repercussi­ons if they didn’t acquiesce,” she told MPS.

“If you don’t see the police as a legitimate force, and I believe the police in Northern Ireland are the only local law enforcemen­t agency that we have and we should have, but if you live in a community that doesn’t trust that the police will keep them safe, what is your alternativ­e? You have no alternativ­e so you have to do what you have to do to keep yourself safe.

“Government is not working together around what are ultimately the same group of young people who are working with social services, who are having additional education programmes, who are in our criminal justice system.

“I’m not convinced that government funding to vulnerable young people is being spent as wisely and as efficientl­y as it should.”

Ms Yiasouma said there are “pockets of good practice” in terms of police engagement with young people on the ground.

But she said she has told the PSNI that they “need to be much better at supporting your local officers on the ground in how they engage with young people”. She said: “Young people in these communitie­s seeing the PSNI as the agency there to protect them needs to be built on because at the moment they don’t. So when they’re being approached and coerced by these groups, they look up and there’s no one there that can stop that happening for them, and that’s the problem.”

Ms Yiasouma also urged that how paramilita­ry groups are referred to changes.

“Young people, particular­ly in some communitie­s, have this romantic notion of paramilita­ry groups, and we need to move away from that language. These are armed groups. There’s nothing that suggests to me that they’re doing anything other than criminal activity,” she said.

Meanwhile Ms Yiasouma said there are around 200 young people who do not appear to have returned to school following the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“There is a group of young people in the couple of hundreds that the system doesn’t understand where they are and how they’re getting on,” she told MPS.

They do it because they need to survive in community KOULLA YIASOUMA YESTERDAY

 ?? ?? ARMED THUGS UFF show of strength
ARMED THUGS UFF show of strength
 ?? ?? COMMENTS Koulla Yiasouma
COMMENTS Koulla Yiasouma

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