The Scotsman

New law will stop children under 12 being criminalis­ed

● But Lib Dems fail to raise criminal responsibi­lity age further to 14 years

- By GINA DAVIDSON gina.davidson@jpimedia.co.uk

Scotland’s age of criminal responsibi­lity has been raised from eight to 12 years after a controvers­ial vote in Holyrood, which saw the Government blasted for underminin­g the Scottish Parliament’s right to claim leadership on human rights issues.

The Government says the legislatio­n will see Scotland lead the way in the UK in terms of ending the treatment of children under the age of 12 as criminals when an offence is committed. The age of criminal responsibi­lity (ACR) in the rest of the UK is ten years.

But an attempt to have the ACR raised to 14, by Scottish Liberal Democrat Alex Colehamilt­on, was resounding­ly defeated.

In a furious speech he said: “Without increasing the age of criminal responsibi­lity to 14 or still higher now, the bill does not just set the face of this Government and Parliament against the rights of children, it fatally undermines any claim that we have as a human rights leader on the world stage.”

He added: “We decry human rights abuses in countries like China and Russia, but both have an ACR higher still than we will achieve in the passage of this bill today – and you cannot lead the world on human rights from the back of the pack.”

While he ultimately said he would back the bill because the current ACR of eight years “is frankly mediaeval”, he added the unamended bill “is an embarrassm­ent and I cannot celebrate its passing”.

At present, although children under 12 cannot be prosecuted in court, they can be referred to the children’s hearings system on the basis they have committed an offence.

Under existing legislatio­n, this means they can gain a criminal record, which can compromise childhoods and limit opportunit­ies and life chances in adulthood, particular­ly around employment.

The Children and Young People’s Commission­er for Scotland, Bruce Adamson, has also said the Government needed to raise the age further than 12 and pointed to “unpreceden­ted interventi­ons from the United Nations and the Council of Europe” during the passage of the Age of Criminal Responsibi­lity (Scotland) Bill in Holyrood.

Earlier this week Maree Todd, the minister for children and young people, announced the establishm­ent of a new advisory group to take forward review of the legislatio­n, including whether the ACR should be raised higher than 12.

But yesterday Mr Cole-hamilton said the Government had set Scotland “on a par with the four most socially conservati­ve countries in all of Europe” and made “a mockery out of our aspiration­s to human rights leadership internatio­nally”.

He said he had avoided a recent event to celebrate the Year of Young People because he “could not stomach it”.

“I could not bear to listen to the minister speaking of her love, and the love of her Government, for the children and young people of this country and their achievemen­ts, when with this bill we’re saying to the young people in Scotland ‘this country will love you until you break the law at which point that love ends’,” he said.

“So I will remind the minister and her Government of this day of this craven piece of legislatio­n.

“And every time it claims to stand up for children, or for human rights; every sugarcoate­d motion it seeks to bring to this chamber and every saccharine policy announceme­nt it uses to promote the image of its commitment to the rights and interests of Scotland’s children, I will remind her and her Government of this day.”

But Ms Todd said the bill was “landmark, ground-breaking legislatio­n”.

She added: “No child under the age of 12 in Scotland will ever again be arrested or charged, be treated as an offender or have any childhood conviction follow them through life.

“I will move as soon as possible to start making a difference to children’s lives. We will also make sure we recognise and respond to victims’ needs whilst reforming the hearings system.”

“You cannot lead the world on human rights from the back of the pack”

 ??  ?? 0 Children under the age of 12 will no longer be deemed criminally responsibl­e for their actions
0 Children under the age of 12 will no longer be deemed criminally responsibl­e for their actions

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