Glasgow Times

Children under 12 no longer criminals

-

ANEW law has come into force meaning no children under 12 will be treated as offenders in the Scottish justice system.

The Age of Criminal Responsibi­lity (Scotland) Act 2019 was passed unanimousl­y in May, with Children’s Minister Maree Todd describing the passage of the Bill as a “historic day”. But despite the unanimous approval for the new law, Liberal Democrat Alex Cole-Hamilton called for the age to be lifted even higher – to either 14 or 16.

He claimed the “internatio­nal community will judge this Government as a failure on human rights” for not pushing the age further.

The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child has demanded the age of criminal responsibi­lity in Scotland be raised to 14 “immediatel­y”, while the Children and Young People’s Commission­er for Scotland Bruce Adamson has also made his view clear that 14 is the “lowest acceptable age”.

But Todd said: “These new provisions mean that the behaviour of children under 12 in Scotland will no longer result in them being treated as offenders in the children’s hearings system.

“Evidence shows that responding to childhood behaviour in a criminalis­ing, stigmatisi­ng way serves only to promote escalation and further harm. That is neither in the interests of the child, nor of the safety of our communitie­s.”

She added: “The Act will deliver a progressiv­e, child-centred approach that will make a real difference to children’s lives, while victims will continue to get the support they need.”

Action for Children’s Paul Carberry said: “The introducti­on of these provisions is a major step forward and something that is far more consistent with Scotland’s approach of prevention and early interventi­on.”

From today, primary-school age children will no longer be able to be reported to a children’s hearing for an offence.

The Scottish Government said children under the age of 12 who commit an offence will have their needs addressed without being treated as a criminal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom