The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Warning unrest equates to form of child abuse

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Northern Ireland’s children’s commission­er has said the behaviour of some adults in relation to the unrest in the region amounts to child abuse.

Children as young as 12 are said to have taken part in some of the riots during the week, while three male teenagers, all aged 14, were arrested following unrest on Friday night.

Commission­er Koulla Yiasouma said children were being coerced into participat­ing by adults, and that this could amount to child abuse.

“This is criminal exploitati­on and coercion by adults of vulnerable and at-risk children and young people and these adults have to be held accountabl­e and stopped” she told BBC Radio 4.

When asked if it amounted to abuse of children, she replied: “Child abuse is a very loaded term but I think it is within that safeguardi­ng family of abuses children may suffer and experience.

“When it comes to safeguardi­ng issues I would put it in that group, yes.”

She added: “Enough is enough when the first petrol bomb or stone is thrown. It’s criminal actors trying to take control and what we need is a calm narrative from our politician­s.”

She called on the UK Government not to dismiss the concerns of people living in Northern Ireland.

She added: “We are living a reality here. When you work on a protocol, when you decide on something like Brexit or any other policy that has an impact on Northern Ireland; understand what’s going on on the ground, talk to those communitie­s, talk to those communitie­s and young people, find out what it might mean.”

She said: “These are our children’s lives and futures and they’re far too important to be playing about with in politics.”

Earlier, former Irish president Mary McAleese said children in Northern Ireland are still “being taught to hate”.

Reflecting on recent violence, Belfast-born Ms McAleese said: “It’s very familiar territory. Regrettabl­y, it arises because they’re in a vacuum, and there is undoubtedl­y a vacuum of the leadership.

“There is bound to be the consequenc­es of Brexit, which, if we go back to Brexit, we realise how little considerat­ion was given in the planning of Brexit and the referendum, of the impact that would have in Northern Ireland. There’s all of that.

“You’re also dealing with young people, regrettabl­y, who are still being taught to hate and who are bringing that hatred and expressing it out on the streets.

“They are 13 and 14 years of age. What experience do they have of life?”

Meanwhile, Ulster Unionist Party leader Steve Aiken has called for a recommitme­nt to the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement. He said: “Saturday marked the 23rd anniversar­y of the Belfast Agreement.

“Given the events of recent weeks and months, violence on our streets and mayhem that we hoped had been consigned to the past, it is more important than ever to reflect on what was agreed 23 years ago.

“Our party made many difficult decisions to establish the framework for peace, but it was to build a stronger and better future for us all.

“Sadly, while much has been achieved, and in many ways our society has been transforme­d, much still needs to be done.

“Too many have played fast and loose with the Agreement and risk plunging another generation into despair.”

He added: “At the heart of the Belfast Agreement was the principle of consent, the understand­ing of parity of esteem, and building trust and mutual respect.

“There has never been a better time for us all to recommit to the Agreement and perhaps a good time for many, both here and across these islands and beyond, to reread the document and see the vision of David Trimble and John Hume.”

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