Children’s Social Work Statistics Scotland 2015/16

March 28, 2017

Executive Summary

At 31 July 2016, there were 15,317 looked after children – a decrease of 83 (or less than one per cent) from 2015. This is the fourth consecutive year the numbers have decreased following a peak of 16,248 in 2012, although this year’s decline is small, numbers in care are stabilising.

There were 2,723 children on the child protection register in 2016, a small decrease from last year, and the first time since 2005 that there have been two consecutive years of decline.

There were an average of 85 residents in secure care accommodation throughout 2015-16, an increase of four per cent from 82 residents in the previous year and reversing the recent downward trend (Table 3.2). However, this increase was driven by an increase in placements from the rest of the UK – there was a five per cent decline in residents from Scotland. http://www.gov.scot/Publications/2017/03/6791

Children’s Social Work Statistics Scotland 2015/16

Downloadable documents:  

  • Children’s Social Work Statistics – Main tables 2015-16 [XLSX, 445.4 kb: 30 Mar 2017]  Open | Open in new window
  • Children’s Social Work Statistics Scotland, 2015-16 [PDF, 4658.0 kb: 29 Mar 2017]  Open | Open in new window

SOURCE http://www.gov.scot/Publications/2017/03/6791/downloads

Additional tables are available at  http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Children/PubChildrenSocialWork

Illustration 1    Infographic showing all children in Scotland and relative number being looked after and on the child protection register at 31 July 2016
Table 1.1   Number of children looked after by type of accommodation, 2009-2016 Table 1.1a    Number of children looked after by type of accommodation, 1971-2016
Table 1.2    Children looked after with and without a current care plan, at 31 July 2016 Table 1.3      Number and percentage of children starting to be looked after by age and gender, 2003-2016
Chart 2    Percentage difference by destination between 2010 and 2016 Table 1.4  Number and percentage of children ceasing to be looked after by length of time looked after and age, 2003-2016
Table 1.5   Percentage of children ceasing to be looked after, by destination, 2002-2016  Illustration 2  Infographic showing proportional representation of post-care destinations (based on table 1.5)
Table 1.6   Pathway plans and nominated pathway co-ordinators of young people who were beyond minimum school-leaving age on the date they ceased to be looked after, during 1 August 2015 to 31 July 2016  Table 1.7  Number and percentage of young people eligible for aftercare services, at 31 July 2016, by age and economic activity
Child protection
Table 2.1   Number of children on the child protection register by gender, 2000-2016 Table 2.1a    Number of children on the child protection register by age and gender, 2000-2016
Table 2.2   Number of children on the child protection register and rate per 1,000 population aged 0-15 by local authority, 2007-2016 Table 2.3  Number of registrations following an initial, pre-birth or transfer-in case conference by length of time since previous de-registration, 2007-2016
Table 2.4    Number of deregistrations from the child protection register by length of time on register and reason for deregistration, 2007-2016 Table 3.1 Secure care unit bed complement at 31 July 2016
 Table 3.2   Secure care accommodation capacity and usage, 2013‑2016 Table 3.3    Young people in secure care accommodation by gender, age, disability and length of stay, 2015-2016
Table 3.4   Number of secure children’s homes/secure care accommodation units, places approved and children accommodated at year end across the United Kingdom, 2015-16

 

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RECORD CHILD NEGLECT CASES RECORDED: NSPCC Stats {Aug 2017}

 

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A leading children’s charity referred a record number of reports of child neglect to Scottish authorities last year.

The NSPCC helpline in Scotland made 905 referrals to the police and social services in 2016/17 following calls or emails from concerned adults, up on 369 in 2011/12.

There were a further 78 contacts to the helpline last year where advice was provided about a child possibly facing neglect.

Across the UK, the NSPCC helpline made 16,882 referrals regarding neglect to children’s services or the police in 2016/17, with the issue mentioned in more than a quarter of all calls.

The organisation said the rise showed that more people are willing to speak up about the issue.

But the NSPCC also warned the full scale of neglect cases could be much greater, and has called on the UK Government to commission a nationwide study to measure the extent of the problem.

Peter Wanless, chief executive of the charity, said: “Neglect can have severe and long-lasting consequences for children, and can also be an indicator of other forms of abuse.

“This is why it is so important for anyone suspecting a child of being neglected to contact the NSPCC Helpline, so we can alert the authorities to quickly step in and help those in need.

“At the same time, it is vital we understand the true nature and scale of child neglect in the UK so we can collectively tackle the fundamental causes.

“Therefore, a Government-commissioned, nationwide prevalence study on child abuse and neglect needs to be conducted, and sooner rather than later.”

https://www.eveningexpress.co.uk/news/scotland/record-child-neglect-cases-referred-by-nspcc-last-year/   https://archive.is/84D8F

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https://www.nspcc.org.uk/


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https://www.sundaypost.com/fp/record-number-of-child-neglect-cases-referred-by-nspcc-in-scotland-last-year/         https://archive.is/gc1WN

LATEST NSPCC STATISTICS #UK

A record number of sexual offences against children were recorded last year, according to police figures.

Police Scotland logged 4368 suspected sexual crimes against under-18s in 2015-16, an average of nearly 12 a day. 

The figure reflects an increase of 286 reported offences in the space of a year and it is up 43% since 2011-12.

In the UK as a whole, an alleged child sex offence is recorded by police every ten minutes, according to the statistics.

NSPCC Scotland said a number of reasons could explain the increase. They include improved methods of recording by police, people coming forward over non-recent incidents and survivors feeling more confident in disclosing abuse following various high-profile cases.

The data shows sexual assaults of young girls and the taking and distributing of indecent images of children were among the most commonly recorded offences.

Instances of communicating indecently with a younger child also increased.

Matt Forde, national head for NSPCC Scotland, said: “These figures speak for themselves regarding the extent of this problem and the urgent need to protect children against these appalling crimes. Sexual abuse can shatter a child’s life and leave them feeling ashamed, depressed, or even suicidal. Victims of abuse display great courage in coming forward and so we need to make sure they have access to timely and appropriate support to help them overcome their trauma. Child sexual abuse is preventable. It is a public health priority and so we urge the Scottish Government to develop a national, consistent and evidence-based approach to preventing child sexual abuse.”

Responding to the charity’s report, assistant chief constable John Hawkins said: “Through the creation of Police Scotland we have been able to bring consistency to our approach to tackling sexual offending against children and we will challenge ourselves to continue to improve our response. However, protecting children and reducing the threat of child sexual abuse in Scotland is everyone’s responsibility. Collectively our objective must be to eliminate child sexual abuse in Scotland.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “We are determined to support families to keep children safe from those who would seek to harm them. The cabinet secretary for justice has also requested a detailed review of sexual crime records for those offences that have driven much of the overall increase in reported sexual crime. This review will include many sexual crimes that are thought to be cyber-enabled.”

The government has also committed to the development of a National Child Protection Policy, the spokesman added.

https://stv.tv/news/scotland/1383877-record-number-of-child-sex-offences-recorded-last-year/  https://archive.is/qERFC


NSPCC SCOTLAND STATISTICS

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UK Statistics 

 

 

 

Child Trafficking: Scotland’s Hidden Scandal {part 1}

Published on: Jan 3, 2017  |  last updated 15th Feb 2017

2017

http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/15025573.Gillian_Anderson_takes_lead_in_campaigning_film_on____abomination____of_child_trafficking/

Traffickers bring child sex slaves from Africa to Scotland  Scotsman11 Jan 2017

Police want to create a 'hostile environment' for traffickersPolice want to create a ‘hostile environment’ for traffickers

Child sex slaves from Africa are among victims being trafficked into Scotland by criminal gangs, according to police.

Statistics from the National Crime Agency (NCA) show a total of 34 potential victims were identified between April and June last year – a 17 per cent increase on the previous quarter.

The figures include two children brought separately from Nigeria and Somalia for the purpose of sexual exploitation.

Police Scotland described the practice as “sickening” and said it was working to make Scotland a “hostile environment” for traffickers.

Victims from Africa, Asia and eastern Europe were among those identified by the authorities and reported using the UK National Referral Mechanism (NRM).

According to the NCA, 26 of the victims identified between April and June last year – the latest figures available – were adults from countries such as Vietnam, China and Albania. The majority were brought to Scotland for sexual exploitation.

But there was also eight children, two of whom were trafficked for sex.

Scotland accounted for just 3.4 per cent of the 1,002 potential victims identified across the UK.

Detective Chief Inspector Stuart Houston, head of Police Scotland’s human trafficking unit, said: “As the latest NRM figures show, traffickers target both children and adults, exploiting them for sexual and/or labour purposes, either across international borders or within Scotland and the UK.

“Tackling human trafficking is a priority for Police Scotland. It is challenging and complex to investigate and most investigations are protracted.

“Trafficked people are victims and will be treated as such. They are at risk and will be provided with help and support.

“Trafficking is unacceptable. We will target those who control, abuse and exploit others by working collaboratively with partners to ensure that Scotland is a hostile environment to this sickening trade.”

Kevin Hyland, the UK’s Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner, said: “The number of victims entering the National Referral Mechanism has continued to increase year on year.

This is true once again for those rescued from modern slavery in Scotland. “Modern slavery is serious, organised crime. It demands our attention, awareness and assets. Thousands of people in the UK are brutally abused in our cities and on our streets – something we cannot allow to continue.”  http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/traffickers-bring-child-sex-slaves-from-africa-to-scotland-1-4337312  http://archive.li/oBxJN

2016

2015

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THE new government figures come as police continue to investigate two separate cases of people smuggling in the UK in recent days.

THREE cases of human trafficking are being discovered in Scotland every week amid concerns many more are going undetected.

A total of 36 cases were uncovered in Scotland in the period from January to March this year. 

That is well on course to outstrip last year’s total detection rate of 66 cases for the full year.

The new government figures come as police continue to investigate two separate cases of people smuggling in the UK in recent days.

The death of a man and discovery of 34 other immigrants in a shipping container at a dockyard and the rescue of 15 immigrants in two separate cases in England have highlighted the issue of trafficking.

The figures were released as the Scottish Parliament’s committee on trafficking was due to meet tonight.

A total of 566 cases of human trafficking were recorded across the whole of the UK between January and March this year.

These include 258 adult women, 134 adult men, 102 girls and 72 boys.

The most common countries of origin for potential victims are Albania with 95, Slovakia with 73, Nigeria with 65 and Vietnam with 37.

Victims from Romania, Poland, Lithuania, China, the Czech Republic and who had been trafficked internally within the UK were also identified.

The most common reasons for an adult being trafficked were sexual exploitation, labour exploitation and domestic servitude.

In Scotland last year there were 99 referrals of human trafficking victims, two thirds of whom were female.

In the latest UK figures there was one case of a person being trafficked for organ harvesting. 

The most common reasons for a child being trafficked are labour exploitation, sexual exploitation and domestic servitude.

People are trafficked for a number of reasons which police breakdown into five types — labour exploitation, sexual exploitation, organ trafficking, domestic
servitude, and internal trafficking, which includes forced begging, cannabis cultivation or sham marriages.

Earlier this year Holyrood Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill outlined plans to introduce a dedicated Human Trafficking Bill in Scotland.

Criminal law relating to human trafficking is devolved to Scottish Ministers and the Scottish Parliament, although border control and immigration are reserved to the UK Parliament.

In March MacKaskill said:”Trafficking human beings and exploiting them through forced labour, domestic servitude, prostitution, or for any other purpose, is an absolutely heinous crime. Hearing first-hand the terrible histories victims of trafficking have only serves to reinforce the need for robust legislation to allow our police and prosecutors greater powers to detect and prosecute those who seek to make money from human misery. Human trafficking is a crime than transcends borders, and we will continue to work with the UK and Northern Irish Governments as we develop our Bill proposals.”

Previously the Daily Record revealed harrowing details of how women “sex-trafficked” from central Africa found themselves on the streets of Scotland’s cities.

Campaigners say many cases are undetected.

In one of the testimonies to a Glasgow charity, a 21-year-old told how she was branded and forced to take a “witchcraft oath” to prevent her escaping.

She said: “I had to take the oath. I was given this mark on my hand. I was told that this mark, if you tell anyone what has transpired, you are going to die.”

www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/cases-human-trafficking-discovered-scotland-4079257

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EXTRA INFO 

Human Trafficking is the illegal trade in human beings, both adults and children, for the purpose of commercial exploitation.

Victims of human trafficking are often the most vulnerable members of a community however, there is no such thing as a typical victim.

Victims are known to come from numerous continents such as Asia, Africa and (Eastern) Europe. They may arrive in your community after being kidnapped, smuggled or tricked by a friend offering a job and the opportunity of a new life, however soon discover that their lives are not their own and are forced into a life of exploitation with no way of escaping.

Trafficking victims are often forced into prostitution, exploitative labour, the illegal drugs trade, stealing or domestic slavery to pay back the debt that traffickers claim they owe them for travel. Victims are trapped in this life with limited freedom or options. They regularly have their identity documents removed and are often subjected to physical and mental abuse, torture and rape.

Human Trafficking exists in communities across Scotland and also can involve people who are resident legally in the country. The industry of trafficking people has become so sophisticated that it often goes unnoticed and assistance from the public is crucial to identify potential signs of Human Trafficking within your community and reporting any concerns to the police.

You do not have to report concerns to the police – you can pass on information anonymously to the independent charity Crimestoppers on .

Potential Signs of Human Trafficking

Human Trafficking can happen anywhere, victims could be living next to you. Look for the signs:

Sexual Exploitation

  • Multiple female foreign nationals living at the same address.
  • Occupants are rarely seen outside.
  • Occupants of premises change regularly.
  • Male callers day and night staying for only a short time.
  • Sexual debris such as condoms, call cards, advertisements.

Forced Labour/Domestic Servitude

Migrant workers who have the right to free movement in and around the United Kingdom, but have limitations placed on their employment may be exploited through Industries such as agriculture, factories, hotels and restaurants.

  • Large number of foreign nationals living in the same address.
  • Occupants change regularly.
  • Van transported at unusual times of the day and/or night.
  • Workers movements are monitored and/or controlled by others.
  • Workers may seem fearful of employers, police or any other external agency and poorly integrate with the wider community.
  • Employers, or someone else, is holding their passport and/or legal documents.
  • Workers have no days off or holiday time.
  • Workers display signs of physical abuse i.e. bruises, cuts and signs of untreated medical problems.
  • Workers display signs of malnutrition, dehydration, exhaustion and poor personal hygiene.

Domestic Servitude is where an adult or child is forced into the role of a servant. This often occurs within a residential address. Signs to look out for include:

  • The person is rarely allowed out of the house, unless their employer or guardian is with them.
  • They have no private space or a proper place to sleep i.e. on the floor or sofa.
  • They have a poor diet or are given the family’s leftover food to eat.
  • They are subject to mental, physical, sexual abuse, threats or other cruelty.
  • A child, may have poor attendance at school, no access to education and no time to play with its peers.
  • There is no interaction with the family, friends or other authorities.

MORE INFO HERE https://modernslavery.co.uk/spot-the-signs.html

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Asylum seeking children: *207 missing* #ECPAT #UK Report

Alarming number of trafficked children going missing from care – new ECPAT UK report

We are nobody in this country.” – Trafficked child interviewed for new ECPAT UK and Missing People report

15 November 2016

Trafficked and unaccompanied asylum-seeking children are going missing from UK care at an “alarmingly high” rate, leading charities ECPAT UK and Missing People have said in a new report released today.

The report, Heading back to harm: A study on trafficked and unaccompanied children going missing from care in the UK  has found that more than a quarter of all trafficked children and over 500 unaccompanied asylum-seeking children went missing at least once in the year to September 2015, while 207 have not been found.

Data collected from 217 local authorities across the UK reveals a “deeply concerning” inconsistency in identifying and recording information on these vulnerable children, with many unable to report on overall numbers of trafficked and unaccompanied children in their care.

These serious data collection flaws, along with the high numbers of trafficked and unaccompanied children going missing, suggest that the UK’s wider child protection response is inadequate, leaving children vulnerable to re-trafficking and abuse.

The report calls on national and local government to reform the child protection system by immediately introducing child-specific training on child trafficking, unaccompanied children and missing; urgently rolling out the national independent child trafficking advocates scheme; resourcing safe and appropriate accommodation with victim-centred safety planning; improving data recording on trafficking and missing; and implementing a coordinated national, regional and local response to this startling trend.

Heading back to harm: A study on trafficked and unaccompanied children going missing from care in the UK analyses Freedom of Information request data from 217 local authorities on trafficked and unaccompanied children going missing from care in the year to September 2015. It also draws on information collected from two focus groups with children and young people who have been trafficked, as well as online surveys of practitioners and policy makers.

Thurrock, Hillingdon, Croydon, Kent County Council and Surrey had the highest numbers of trafficked and unaccompanied children going missing. The top three nationalities of missing trafficked children were Vietnamese, British and Albanian, while Albanian, Afghan, Vietnamese and Eritrean children accounted for the highest proportion of missing unaccompanied children. 

London, the South East, East Anglia and the East and West Midlands accounted for 75% (445) of the 590 trafficked children and 90% (4,267) of the total 4,744 of unaccompanied children.

Capture.PNGChloe Setter, Head of Advocacy, Policy & Campaigns, ECPAT UK, said:

“For too long, children who are at risk of exploitation, or who have been trafficked, have gone missing from care – sometimes repeatedly, sometimes forever. It is a national disgrace that this problem has remained neglected and these children rendered invisible by poor data collection and national coordination. Heading back to harm has attempted to shine a light on this problem and, in doing so, has unearthed an alarming trend of our most vulnerable children disappearing; hundreds of them never to be found. We must not accept this as a reality any longer. Every child that goes missing is a failure in our duty to protect them from harm. The government must listen to the voices and experiences of young people, and urgently redress the gaps in our protection systems that allow traffickers to flourish and children to suffer.”

Susannah Drury, Director of Policy and Research, Missing People, said:

“Any child who goes missing is at risk of harm, from sleeping rough or being a victim of crime or exploitation.  Trafficked and unaccompanied children are especially vulnerable and in greater need of protection. It is therefore vital that any trafficked or unaccompanied child who goes missing is treated as high risk by the police and other agencies and that finding them and making them safe is always prioritised over any questions about their immigration status or criminal activity. It is also crucial that these vulnerable children are treated with respect and compassion by all professionals to create a culture of trust in their uncertain and unsettled lives.” 

The report will be launched in Parliament with Sarah Newton, Minister for Vulnerability, Safeguarding and Countering Extremism, on Tuesday 15th November 2016. SOURCE ECPAT


Hundreds of ‘invisible’ missing children failed by system, claims report  

 15 Nov 2016 

Recording practices have been branded “a national disgrace” as figures reveal that almost three in ten trafficked children in care went missing in 2014/15.

A joint study by charities ECPAT UK and Missing People has found that 167 trafficked children went missing from care homes in the 12 months to September 2015.

Over the same period, 593 unaccompanied children from abroad went missing, and 207 have not been found since.

However, the charities claim that the UK’s response to these figures has been inadequate as they found that many of these cases are passing under the radar.

The research, released on Tuesday (November 15), used Freedom of Information data from 217 local authorities and focus groups with young victims of trafficking. It found that
  • 590 children in care were identified as or suspected of being trafficked over the period, and 4,744 were unaccompanied.
  • Five regions – London, the South East, East Anglia and the East and West Midlands – accounted for three quarters of all child trafficking victims and 90 per cent of the unaccompanied children.
  • Welsh local authorities reported that none of their 14 trafficked children and two of their 57 unaccompanied children disappeared.
  • Similar figures were reported in Scotland, where two of 48 trafficking victims and three of 150 unaccompanied children went missing, and Northern Ireland saw seven and two go missing respectively.

The researchers claim that in too many cases, practitioners were failing to properly use the National Referral Mechanism (NRM), so many at risk children were not being identified.

Respondents said that failing to identify those in danger, or not believing their accounts, only further compounds the risk they face.

More recording failures were identified around ethnicity data, as just ten local authorities were able to provide information on nationality.

Those that did showed that trafficked Vietnamese children were more likely to go missing than any others, followed by British children, but the NRM data placed British children as the third most at risk group.

The majority of British victims were young girls who were being trafficked for sexual exploitation, and professionals agreed that this demographic was more likely to go missing.

However, more than four in ten respondents said that British children were ‘rarely’ or ‘never’ recorded as trafficked, and many cases are not referred to the NRM.

The report claimed this might be because some practitioners believe that the term ‘trafficked’ only applies to those who cross international borders.

Based on its findings, the report has called on national and local government to introduce child-specific training on child trafficking and unaccompanied and missing children.

It also recommended improving data recording practices and implementing a more collaborative national, regional and local response to children going missing.

An NSPCC spokesman said: “Today’s report reflects our own concerns that child trafficking is an increasing problem in the UK. The number of children referred to the NSPCC’s Child Trafficking Advice Centre has increased by 96 per cent since 2007/08. And the system is already facing challenges – the Association of Directors of Children’s Services has warned that a national shortage of foster carers is putting enormous pressure on a system that has already seen the number of child migrants coming to the UK double in the last two years alone. Many of these children are at grave risk of harm, including sexual and criminal exploitation. Allowing any child to slip under the radar and be put in harm’s way while in the UK’s care is unacceptable.”


READ MORE

  1.  Kent Online
  2.  YouthThurrock
  3. Child trafficking victims and unaccompanied children are going Welfare Society Territory
  4. ‘Alarming’ number of child trafficking victims missing from care  LocalGov

Tim Farron on the missing kids…

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National Referral Mechanism statistics

NRM statistics are available here pdf . (726 KB)


NSPCC STATS

1 in 5 victims of trafficking are children   Source

People

Over 700 children were identified as potential victims of trafficking last year  Source

The most common countries for children to be trafficked from are UK, Vietnam, Slovakia, Romania and Nigeria  Source

illustration of umbrella

The most common reasons for children to be trafficked are sexual exploitationand criminal exploitation.  Source

People

We’ve dealt with over 1,300 cases of child trafficking since 2007

 

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HUMAN TRAFFICKING STATS  National Crime Agency

PREVIOUS YEARS STATS HERE


Sex trade victims safeguarded in international crackdown

 

 

 

 

 

​NHS figures reveal SHOCKING rise in self-harming among children 

NHS figures show shocking rise in figures among children

The number of children and young people self-harming has risen dramatically in the past 10 years, new NHS figures obtained by the Guardian show.

The sharp upward trend in under-18s being admitted to hospital after poisoning, cutting or hanging themselves is more pronounced among girls, though there have been major rises among boys, too.

Experts say the rise is “shocking” confirmation that more young people are experiencing serious psychological distress because they are under unprecedented social pressures.

The number of girls under 18 who have needed hospital treatment after poisoning themselves has gone up from 9,741 in 2005-06 to 13,853 – a rise of 42% – figures collated by NHS Digital show. The numbers of boys ingesting a poisonous substance have stayed almost unchanged; 2,234 did so in 2005-06 and 2,246 did so in 2014-15.

 

However, the number of girls treated as inpatients after cutting themselves has almost quadrupled over the same period, from 600 to 2,311 – a 385% rise. The number whom A&E teams have treated after hanging themselves has also risen during that decade, from 29 to 125. While far fewer boys end up in hospital after cutting themselves, the numbers went up from 160 in 2005-06 to 457 in 2014-15 – a rise of 286%. Similarly, the numbers of boys who hanged themselves also doubled from 47 to 95 over the same period, the figures show.

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“This is a depressing confirmation of the clinical experience of child and adolescent psychiatrists’ experience on the ground,” said Dr Peter Hindley, chair of the Faculty of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the Royal College of Psychiatrists.

“It is also shocking because it appears to confirm our clinical experience that levels of distress are rising, though not all young people who self-harm have mental health problems, and [that] mental health disorders are rising, for both girls and boys,” he said.

Experts said the rises were likely to be due to a variety of factors, including pressure to succeed at school, the damaging effects of social media, family breakup, growing inequality in recent years, children’s body-image fears, a history of abuse, including sexual abuse, and increasing sexualisation. The NHS’s most senior doctor responsible for young people’s health said the “distressing” figures underlined that greater improvements were needed to boost support for troubled children.

“It’s clearly distressing that more young people are causing harm to themselves and we know that the problems facing children are growing,” said Dr Jackie Cornish, NHS England’s national clinical director for children, young people and transition to adulthood.

“In common with most experts, we believe this is due to increasing stress and social pressure on young people, including to succeed at school, and emerging problems with body image leading to eating disorders and self-harm.

v-v She added: “We recognise that vital care for children and young people’s mental health is an area where more work needs to be done.” Jeremy Hunt, the health secretary, severely criticised NHS care of troubled young people last week. Child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) were the “biggest single area of weakness in NHS provision” and beset by “big problems”, including failure to intervene early enough when problems such as eating disorders emerged, which meant that “too many tragedies” were occurring, he said.

Hindley added: “The rise is likely to be as a result of many factors but the most important ones are likely to be: growing inequality in the age of austerity, the negative impact of the digital age, increasing sexualisation – this is particularly important for girls – and the impact of abuse and sexual exploitation, and increased pressure to succeed.”

Sarah Brennan, the chief executive of Young Minds, said that troubled young people were harming themselves partly because help for them is so inadequate that some do not receive specialist support once it is obvious they have psychological problems. “It’s extremely worrying that the number of young people needing hospital treatment for self-harm has risen so sharply. There needs to be far more investment in early intervention, so that problems are dealt with when they first emerge.”

Budget-driven local council cuts to social workers, educational psychologists, parenting classes and mental health services in schools had reduced care and support for under-18s in distress, she said. CAMHS teams were responding to rising demand by rationing care.

The government has promised to put an extra £1.4bn into care of troubled children during this parliament to ensure that at least 70,000 more under-18s get high-quality care. However, NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens has admitted that even if that target is met, it will still only increase the proportion of young people being helped from a quarter to a third.“The pressure on CAMHS has forced services to raise the bar for access to treatment. Consequently, about a quarter of young people are being turned away, and this will include many who self-harm. At the moment too many vulnerable children end up going to A&E because no other help is available,” Brennan added. Young Minds is concerned that children who self-harm and then turn to the internet for help could come across unhelpful information about, and even encouragement to continue, their behaviour. Young peoplewho self-harm are most likely to go online for information and few to seek their parents’ support, according to a survey it conducted in March with Childline, Self-Harm UK and The Mix. While 76% of youngsters said they would search the web, just 16% would look to their mother or father, while 61% would ask a friend, and 27% cited a GP and 17% a teacher.

Hunt last week pledged to make children’s mental health a top priority. Cornish added that NHS England has created 56 extra beds in specialist inpatient units for children and young people in the last two years and is putting £30m into improving services for those suffering from an eating disorder such as anorexia nervosa. Earlier this month, it allocated £25m to help cut young people’s waiting time for treatment and reduce the backlogs of those awaiting urgent care.

NHS England collated the figures it shared with the Guardian from those covering self-harm and self-poisoning from its Hospital Episodes Statistics datasets from the past decade.

Number of sex crimes reported in Scotland reaches highest level in 45 years, nearly 50% of cases involved children

{above} Justice Secretary Michael Matheson says he is “proud” of the police’s work

wp-1475678661514.jpgNumber of sex crimes reported in Scotland reaches the highest level in 45 years, with nearly half of cases involving children 

WHILE recorded crime has fallen to its lowest level since 1974, sex crimes, including rape and sexual assault, increased to over 10,000. 

MORE than 10,000 sex crimes were reported to Police Scotland in a year, despite recorded crime falling to its lowest level since 1974.

New statistics show sex crimes, including rape and sexual assault, increased 7% to 10,273 in Scotland between 2014-15 and 2015-16 to the highest level in 45 years. Non-sexual violent crime, including attempted murder and serious assault, also rose 7% in the same period, to 6,775.

A total of 43% of sex crimes recorded involved child victims. Vandalism and fire-raising crimes increased 4% year on year to 54,226, while crimes of dishonesty, such as theft, housebreaking and shoplifting, fell 9% to 115,789. 

The “other crimes” category, which includes drug misuse, resisting arrest and handling offensive weapons, fell 4% to 59,180.

Overall recorded crime has dropped 4% to 246,243.

Justice Secretary Michael Matheson praised Police Scotland’s “excellent” work.

He added: “I am very pleased that Scotland now has the lowest rate of recorded crime in 42 years, including reductions in drug crime, theft and handling offensive weapons over the last year. 

“While higher levels of recorded sexual crime are broadly in line with UK trends, these include a significant number of historical cases and may reflect greater willingness by victims to come forward, such incidents are completely unacceptable. This is why we have taken tough action to ensure perpetrators are brought to justice.”

Opposition politicians and abuse charities called for further action to tackle rising sex crimes.

Scottish Conservative shadow justice secretary Douglas Ross said: “The Scottish Government may crow about what it sees as record-low levels of crime, but that doesn’t tell the whole story – and will be of no comfort to the increasing number of victims of sexual crime. 

“Reporting of historic crime may make up part of this, but it’s clear there is an extremely alarming trend here.”

He called on the SNP to change the community sentencing system “which sees some serious criminals like rapists and child sex offenders escaping jail”.

Scottish Liberal Democrat justice spokesman Liam McArthur said: “Despite the overall fall in recorded crime the number of sexual crimes recorded increased for the seventh year in a row – this time by 7%.

“More than four in 10 cases involved child victims. Our police officers face huge challenges to keep us safe. It is time that the Scottish Government got serious about backing our police.” 

Matt Forde, national head of service for NSPCC Scotland, said the rise of sex crimes against children is “extremely concerning” and he called on the authorities to “tackle this very real problem with the urgency it needs”.

Deputy Chief Constable Iain Livingstone said: “The increase in the report of sexual crime is in part a reflection of the increased level of confidence the public has in reporting this type of crime to the police with the knowledge that every complaint will be handled sensitively and professionally. This equally applies to reports of historical abuse.

“We recognise the increase in crimes of violence and although this remains low in a historical context, we continue to work with partners in communities to tackle violence and address the influence that alcohol plays in many of these crimes.”  SOURCE


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Sex crime in Scotland surges to 45-year high

Sex crime in Scotland has surged to its highest level in 45 years, according to “extremely alarming” official statistics published yesterday that prompted demands for SNP ministers to toughen up the justice system.

The Scottish Government’s annual report on recorded crime showed 10,273 sex offences were committed in 2015/16, seven per cent more than the previous year and a 53 per cent rise from 2006/07.

This is the highest total since 1971, with the total increasing every year since 2008/09, the year after the SNP came to power. In nearly half of cases, 43 per cent, the victim was a child under the age of 18.

The number of attempted rapes increased by 13 per cent last year to a record high. Although the total for rape and attempted rapes fell slightly, it has increased by 60 per cent over the past five years.

Sexual assaults increased by six per cent over the past year and 36 per cent over four years, with one of the main reasons a 56 per cent rise involving “penetration” of a female in 2015/16. The total number of sex assaults in the Highlands also rocketed by an astonishing 56 per cent in a single year.The number of “other” sex crimes increased 20 per cent from 3,555 to 4,254 in a single year. This category included those with victims aged between 13 and 15, indecent photographs of children, incest and indecent exposure.

Non-sexual violent crime also increased, by seven per cent, with the number of attempted murders and serious assaults surging by 27 per cent.

SNP ministers yesterday hailed figures showing overall crime is down four per cent to the lowest level since 1974. They blamed historic cases for the marked rise in sex offences. But Conservatives accused them of “crowing” about the total but said this would be “no comfort” to the increasing number of sex attack victims.

The statistics were published the week after it emerged that some rapists and child-sex offenders have been punished with the SNP’s community payback order (CPO) scheme rather than prison.

Police Scotland is investigating increasing numbers of sex crimes 

Douglas Ross, the Scottish Tories’ Shadow Justice Minister, said:

“Reporting of historic crime may make up part of this, but it’s clear there is an extremely alarming trend here. These are among the most traumatic crimes that can take place, and we owe it to the public to ensure the levels of these crimes reduce rather than increase.”

He argued that using CPOs to punish serious sex crimes

“sends out the wrong message and has to change as a matter of urgency.”

Claire Baker, his Labour counterpart also argued that the 45 per cent rise in sex crimes could not be entirely attributed to more victims coming forward or historic cases.

She said: “We need to accept that Scotland has an issue that needs to be seriously addressed.”

The figures also showed cases of fire-raising and vandalism went up by four per cent, while instances of stalking rose 15 per cent from 1,251 to 1,435. Meanwhile, illegal importation of drugs soared by a remarkable 148 per cent.

However, crimes of dishonesty fell by nine per cent and the number of instances of handling offensive weapons fell to its lowest level since 1984.

Michael Matheson, the Justice Minister, said the increase in sex crimes was “unacceptable” but said the Scottish Government had taken “tough action” to ensure the culprits are brought to justice. SOURCE

 

Paedophiles ‘casting net wide’ as sex crimes triple in Scotland

Paedophiles ‘casting net wide’ as sex crimes triple  September 29 2016

Figures released by Police Scotland show that in 2015/16 there were 645 internet child sexual abuse crimes recorded

Internet child sexual abuse offences have almost tripled in the past five years in Scotland as paedophiles increasingly turn to social media and smartphones in search of young victims.

The crime of taking, distributing and possessing indecent images of children has jumped by 186 per cent since 2010, new police figures show.

Figures released by Police Scotland show that in 2010/11 there were 225 internet child sexual abuse crimes recorded by police, but by 2015/16 this had risen to 645 offences. Child protection charities say that the internet is allowing sexual predators to “cast their net very widely” in their hunt for victims.

Alan Wardle, head of policy at the NSPCC, said that a greater confidence among victims to come forward and report offences had played a part in the rise in numbers but that there was also a growing threat online.

“I think there is now a much greater recognition that this is a serious crime and that it has serious consequences for its victims,” he said. “Predators are able to cast their net very widely online. They will fire out messages to children very widely and then try to lure them in, but there is also a problem of children taking images themselves and sending them to someone and it gets out of their control and ends up in the collections of paedophiles. There is an issue about the internet being able to meet the desires [of paedophiles] that wouldn’t have been possible before.”

Mr Wardle said that the police, internet companies and wider society needed to be “skilled up” about online security to deal with the rising problem.

Online child sexual abuse is a national threat — the reality is it is happening now

A recent investigation into Scottish crime figures revealed that 11.4 per cent of all sex crimes had a “cyber element”, of which a significant proportion involved children.

The report by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary in Scotland (HMICS) found that criminals were using social media networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to carry out attacks against children, including rape.

The HMICS crime audit detailed how an eight-year-old child received indecent images via a popular app on their smartphone.

Other crimes involved young children being coerced to view adults engaging in sexual activity via their phone, or being bullied into taking and sending indecent images of themselves.

Although many parents were aware of the need for internet restrictions on their home computer to protect their children, the report said it was “clear” that many of the sex crimes targeted at children were committed via apps on smartphones and tablets.

The true scale of the problem is hidden from view, however, because many are not recorded by the police.

The HMICS crime audit discovered that more than a quarter of cyber-related sex crimes did not result in a police report.

Highlighting the fact that many of the perpetrators are outside Scotland, and their actions are not recorded as a crime, it said: “This is a concern, given that statistics may be used to develop policy, resource policing and design victim support or education services.”

Police Scotland is aware of the increase in cyber-enabled crime and the risk of online sexual harm. In June and July this year it carried out Operation Latisse, a national initiative which focused on tackling online child sexual abuse.

By the end of July, it had resulted in 77 people being arrested and charged, the identification of more than 500 children, aged between three and 18, who were either victims or potential victims of online predators, as well as the recovery of 30 million images of abuse.

Malcolm Graham, the assistant chief constable (major crime and public protection), said: “Online child sexual abuse is a national threat — the reality is it is happening now, not only in Scotland but across the world, to children of all ages, from infants to teenagers. Operation Latisse was about shining a light on the scale of this issue — it was focused activity to tackle the many forms of online child sexual abuse by identifying those who pose a risk to children online and, more importantly, identifying victims of online sexual abuse and exploitation, as well as preventing more youngsters becoming victims.”

SOURCE

Revealed: THE TRUE HORROR of Child Abuse in the #UK. SHOCKING figures state 1 in 14 suffer Child Sexual Abuse

6 MILLION UK adults suffered abuse as children – crime study

Up to six million adults in the UK say they suffered emotional, physical or sexual abuse as children, a new study has found.

The crime survey study of England and Wales carried out by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) found that up to half a million adult women and 100,000 adult males had been raped.

Of those individuals 33,000 had been victims of rape or attempted rape before the age of nine, the figures indicate. It was the first time a question on abuse had been included in the survey.

There also appeared to be a class dynamic at play with sexual abuse more likely to have been a feature in the childhoods of middle class professionals.

Working class people, it was found, were more likely to have suffered physical or psychological abuse.

Read more Institutional child sex abuse inquiry loses third head.. &  it hasn’t even started yet

For those who had suffered sexual abuse it was most likely that it had been inflicted by family members, acquaintances or people otherwise known to them.

Three out of every four victims of sexual violence said they had not reported the abuse for fear of embarrassment.

“We as a society are not acknowledging these levels of sexual abuse. We do not talk about the sexual abuse of half a million women who were children when they were victims of rape or attempted rape,” clinical psychologist Dr Elly Hanson told the Times.

“We need to acknowledge it and tackle it head on,” she added.

Hanson also said that the long-term implications of abuse must be kept in mind.

“Child abuse is the hidden major contributor to a host of societal problems including substance abuse, self-harm and suicidality, mental health and anxiety problems,” she said.

A spokesperson for the NSPCC told the paper: “Including historic abuse for the first time in ONS figures confirms the horrifying fact that a vast number of adults were abused as children. The survey is an important step towards gauging the true level of child abuse.”

ABUSE DURING CHILDHOOD SURVEY

To read in full…  Download as PDF

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Harrowing study reveals one in every 14 adults was sexually abused as a child 

Some 11% of women and 3% of men in said they were abused by a friend or parent

One in every 14 adults experienced child abuse when they were a child

A harrowing study reveals one in 14 adults is living with the trauma of being sexually abused as a child.

Some 11% of women and 3% of men in said they were abu

Barnardo’s chief executive Javed Khan said of the figures: “The sheer scale of those who reported witnessing or being abused as children is utterly staggering.”

Three in four victims said they did not report what happened at the time, fearing “embarrassment or humiliation, or thinking that they would not be believed” – highlighted by the case of vile child sex predator Jimmy Savile .capture

According to the Crime Survey for England and Wales released a total of 567,000 women and 102,000 men aged between 16 and 59 suffered serious sexual assault including rape as

The NSPCC said it “confirms the horrifying fact that a vast number of adults were abused as children and told no one about the ordeal they suffered”.

Boys were most likely to be abused aged 11 (42%), while it was 14 (33%) for girls

Most rape victims said they had been targeted by a friend or acquaintance (30%) or family member (26%).

Apart from sexual abuse, 9% of those who took part said they had suffered psychological abuse and 7% physical abuse.

Some 8% said they had witnessed domestic abuse.

National Police Chiefs’ Council Lead for Child Protection Simon Bailey said: “We will keep encouraging those who have been the victim to report it to us in the knowledge that they will be listened to, believed and an impartial investigation launched. By the time a victim reports child abuse it is too late – the damage has been done. It is vital we work together to spot the signs and prevent the children of today becoming the victims of tomorrow.” mirror


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HORRIFIC: Nearly 700,000 aged between 16 and 59 said they had been raped


REVEALED: Shock findings lay bare UK’s secret child abuse hell

Nearly 700,000 aged between 16 and 59 said they had been raped with experts branding the results “utterly staggering”. 

The Crime Survey for England and Wales found an average of 7% had been sexually abused

Seven per cent revealed they had been physically beaten. And 9% admitted they had suffered psychological abuse.

Some 11% of women and 3% of men in England and Wales said they had suffered some sort of sexual violence in their childhood with 75% not reporting the attack.

ShadowsGirls were most likely to be abused at the age of 14,

while boys were most often targeted when they were just 11.  Nearly one in 10 also revealed they had witnessed some form of domestic abuse while growing up.The shock findings came after the Office for National Statistics introduced questions about childhood abuse in this year’s survey.

Girl in shadows

Nearly 10 per cent revealed they had witnessed domestic violence

“We have to teach children how to protect themselves from abuse”

Sarah Champion. 

Labour MP Sarah Champion called for mandatory relationship education.

She said: “We have to teach children how to protect themselves from abuse.”

An NSPCC spokesman said the findings were “horrific” while chief executive of Barnardo’s Javed Khan added: “The scale of those who reported witnessing or being abused as children is utterly staggering.” 

SOURCE 


THOUSANDS & THOUSANDS of Child #Refugees #MISSING from #Europe

239 unaccompanied refugee children disappeared from UK   Sunday 17 April 2016

There are fears some of the children are being taken into ‘a life of slavery and exploitation’  

At least 239 unaccompanied refugee children permanently disappeared from care facilities in the UK in 2015.

It represents a 75 per cent rise in the number of lone asylum-seeking children going missing from care, according to a joint investigation by BBC 5 Live and Buzzfeed News.

Freedom of information requests to 140 local authorities across England and Wales have revealed the significant increase – with 51 children disappearing from care in October 2015 alone.

Other findings include that the Home Office is “releasing children into unchecked accommodation” despite concerns they would be trafficked; the missing children are being treated as “low” or “medium” risk; and councils “struggling” to provide enough safe accommodation for children. It found the number of Vietnamese children going missing from care tripled in the last year.

Libby Freeman, founder of refugee charity Calais Action, demanded the government launch a “full and proper” investigation.

Ms Freeman told The Independent: “Unlike in Calais, where they are refusing to take responsibility, they can’t sidestep it here. Austerity and the cuts are partly to blame for this. The social care system has been damaged and more and more people are falling through the net.”

According to the EU police agency Europol, more than 10,000 unaccompanied child refugees have disappeared in Europe in the last two years.

Anne Longfield, who is tasked with protecting the rights of children in England, wrote to French authorities earlier this month to ask them to accelerate the asylum claims of unaccompanied children living in the Calais “Jungle” refugee camp. The Independent


Almost 6,000 refugee children went missing last year, says Germany 12.04.16

Almost 6,000 refugee children and minors were reported missing in Germany last year, according to its interior ministry, amid growing concerns that traffickers and criminals are preying on thousands of vulnerable young people travelling amid the flow of refugees into Europe.

The exact scale of the crisis is unclear, because rudimentary and overwhelmed registration systems mean Europe does not have a clear picture of the number of children arriving on its shores, or close tracking of their onward route.

Some of those who vanish may never have registered, paranoid that officials will lock them up. Others may have been reunited with families and not told local officials. But there is little question that others have fallen into the hands of traffickers, and thousands more are at risk from criminals.

European Union estimates that at least 10,000 child refugees had disappeared after arriving in the continent were “very likely to be underestimated”, a senior official at Unicef warned on the day the German numbers were released.

“The thing is, they are invisible, that’s the very reason why [they are vulnerable] – if children aren’t counted, they don’t count,” said Sarah Crowe, Unicef’s global spokesperson on the European and refugee and migrant crisis. “Different states need to know who is in their country and take care of them.”

Germany’s interior ministry also admitted its estimate could be too low. Authorities are taking the situation “very seriously”, but cases are hard to follow due to the lack of central data collection, spokesman Johannes Dimroth said.

Most of the children who have been identified as missing came from Syria, Afghanistan, Eritrea, Morocco and Algeria, the ministry said, and about 550 of them were under 14.

Overall, 95,000 children who were not accompanied by an adult or had been separated from their families had sought asylum in the EU last year, the majority of them in Germany and Sweden, Crowe said. Read in full at The Guardian


Read more


Related

250,000 children are reported missing every year in the EU, 1 child every 2 minutes.

Massive rise in child abuse figures revealed in new NSPCC report ·

Massive rise in child abuse figures revealed in new NSPCC report   June 21, 2016

The number of child cruelty and neglect cases recorded by Devon and Cornwall Police has seen a sharp 15 per cent rise in three years, the NSPCC revealed today.

One 14-year-old told ChildLine his parents hit him if he asks for food: “Sometimes I feel like eating pet food because it’s all there is in the house.”

And another 13-year-old admitted he steals food from other children’s packed lunch boxes because his mum goes to the pub every weekend and there is only cereal for him and his brother to eat at home.

Neglect featured in six out of ten Serious Case Reviews. undertaken when a child dies or is seriously injured or abused.

 

The NSPCC annual child protection review – How Safe are our children – shows 78 local offences in 2012/13. The number then fell to 70 in 2013/14, but jumped back up to 90 in 2014/15 – reflecting a 29per cent increase within a year across the Devon and Cornwall policing patch

In England in the last 10 years, the figure went up by a massive 75per cent from 4,855 in 2005/06 to 8,506 offences in 2014/15.

The huge increase in cases was also reflected in the number of calls made to the NSPCC helpline – 16,000 nationally last year.

One 14-year-old boy who called the NSPCC’s ChildLine service said: “I know it sounds disgusting but sometimes I feel like eating pet food because it’s all there is in the house. But I just drink water to make me feel full- up instead. My teacher has asked why I’m dressed in dirty clothes and why I never have any lunch money and I don’t know what to say. I feel angry at my parents because they don’t seem to care how miserable it’s making me. If I ask them for anything they become really angry and hit me. Sometimes I feel killing myself will be the only way out.”

Another 13-year-old told how he was forced to steal because he was so hungry: “My mum goes out every weekend to the pub. She doesn’t seem to care about me or my brother. There is never any food at home and when we ask for something to eat she gives us cereal. I’m always feeling tired and can’t concentrate – I only ever think about food when I’m at school. Sometimes I steal packed lunches from the other kids because I know I probably won’t get anything at home. I don’t know if my life will ever change but I can’t live like this anymore.”

Adults called ChildLine with fears about children who were starving and dirty, or about young people who lived in rat-infested homes, while other contacts reported parents who were drunk or left their children to fend for themselves.

The NSPCC says it’s unclear why the figures have risen so dramatically, but greater public awareness and improvements in how police record offences could be factors.

Sharon Copsey, NSPCC head of service for South West England, said: “Neglect is the most common form of abuse in the UK and can wreak havoc on a child’s brain development, emotional well-being, ability to form relationships, and mental health. These children are more likely to suffer from depression and post-traumatic disorder, and even suicidal thoughts. For some, neglect can be fatal.

“These levels of neglect simply do not belong to the 21st century. Many of these lonely, frightened, children have to resort to desperate measures to survive.

“It’s an unacceptable situation which must be remedied. And we can only do that by looking out for vulnerable children and making sure they are given the right support to prevent longer term damage to the lives of those who have survived the horror of such neglect and cruelty.”

The NSPCC is running a campaign – It’s Time – for all child victims of abuse to be given timely, appropriate therapy to help them overcome their traumatic experience. A survey last year revealed that more than one in five children referred to specialist NHS mental health services- including abuse victims- had their cases rejected.

Neglect and serious case reviews: a report from the university of East Anglia commissioned by NSPCC. London: NSPCC  Source torquayheraldexpress

Every Year MORE & MORE Children Go Missing From Care (2012-2016)

 PDF

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Number of children missing from foster care rose by nearly a fifth last year, figures show

Ofsted statistics also show that the number of times children were recorded as missing from foster care increased by a third


Ofsted Missing children PDFs 2013

                2013 – 2014

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UK GOV OFSTED FOSTERING REPORT 2013-14  PDF


 Thousands of children in care disappear each year May 23rd 2014

Children in care went missing on 24,000 separate occasions in two years, Channel 4 News can reveal, including babies and toddlers. Some of society’s most vulnerable tell us why they disappeared.

 The figures – drawn together through freedom of information (FoI) requests – show some of the country’s most vulnerable children are disappearing from residential homes and foster placements, sometimes for hours or days, sometimes for months and even years.

In Norfolk a five-year-old boy was missing for nearly two years, while in Essex a baby girl under one was missing for four months.

The data, gathered in a joint investigation with OpenWorld News, shows that from January 2012 to December 2013 there were more than 24,000 incidents where children went missing. The true extent of the problem may even be much bigger, as many local authorities refused to reveal their data.

It is thought the babies who go missing (very much a rarity in terms of the statistics) are taken by parents during care visits. But by far the biggest number of missing episodes identified involved children from 10 to 16: children like Annie.

Annie’s story: ‘All your choices are taken away’

Annie was 13 when she ran away from her foster care placement. Placed in the middle of nowhere, miles away from home, she says she realised that going missing was dangerous but was so desperate, and didn’t feel she had any other choice.

“Because all your choices are taken away from you, you’re not allowed to make any decisions but actually the one thing I can do is physically move myself away so I guess it’s the one last little bit of control I had left,” she told me.

We were trash. We were just tramps. If they were interested, they would have put their foot down a long time ago.Claire

When Annie was eventually found safe and well with a relative, she says all the focus from social services and the police was about taking her back. No one was asking why she had gone missing in the first place.

“It was not about what happened while I was missing,” she said, “was it scary, or actually, what caused you to do something so dangerous. What pushed you to that point?”

Child exploitation

Claire’s story is very different yet depressingly familiar at the same time. She was put into care at her mother’s request. Claire had been groomed by older men from the age of 12, and her mother Vanessa simply felt she couldn’t protect her any more. But once she went into the home, both admit the problem just got worse. Vanessa said: “She was going missing for not just days: it was weeks on end.”

Claire said she would sleep in the home all day, go out to be picked up by the men in the evening and return home the next morning. She says it was common knowledge that she was having sex with many men, who were much older. She said social services and the staff just didn’t care: “We were trash. We were just tramps. If they were interested, they would have put their foot down a long time ago.”

Yet while both Claire and her mother are critical of the authorities, they acknowledge that girls in Claire’s situation can be difficult to help. In recent years, as more has become known about the links between children going missing from care and sexual exploitation, there is a renewed focus on tackling the problem.

Police as ‘taxi service’

Privately the police and those who work in care express their frustration. Often it’s the same children who go missing repeatedly. Do you put the police on full scale alert every time? Or do care home staff exercise their judgement if children go missing to see the same friends or to visit family but always come back? What happens on the one occasion when those children don’t return from being “missing” at the usual time?

Police have also complained in the past about being used as a sort of “taxi service” by care homes who send them out to pick up children who are missing but not thought to be in any danger.

What is being done?

The government is moving on this. It has issued new guidance to care home staff to make sure that any child who has gone missing is interviewed by someone independent to establish why they left and what happened while they were gone. They have also brought in new arrangements for collecting data on this – the accepted view across the board that it is currently something of a mess – and the new Ofsted inspection framework will put much more focus on children who go missing.

It is an acknowledgement of problems which are not new to the care system but at least now seem to be being taken more seriously: that children in care can be profoundly unhappy and very vulnerable, and that running away is a very obvious sign that something is badly wrong.

Dealing with their unhappiness may not always be possible, but keeping them safe should be the least the system can do.

Tune in to Channel 4 News from 7pm on Friday to watch Jackie Long’s report C4NEWS


National Crime Agency 2014: In UK, One Person Goes Missing Every Two Minutes. Of Which, TWO THIRDS ARE CHILDREN

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#ScotGov: 5 DAY REPORT CARD & #STURGEON’S RESPONSE

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imageimageimageimageimage
FAILS

PASS

3 COULD DO BETTER

{So, we are NOT FAT. That’s because we are being bled dry! WE ARE HAVIN TO RELY ON FOODBANKS SO WE CAN EAT

1 in 4 Scots kids live BELOW EU POVERTY LINE

& happy? Well, after reading that, I’m no very fukin happy right now!} c-report-card-1.gif

 


 DAY 2
imageimageimage imageimage

3 x COULD DO BETTER

1 x PASS

{W O W… THATS ABYSMAL!}d

 


DAY 3

imageimageimageimageimage

3 x PASS

1 x COULD DO BETTER

1 x FAIL

{WELL, THAT IS BETTER, BUT ITS STILL NO GREAT IS IT? & AS FOR POLICE SCOTLAND, THEY MURDERED A MAN IN COLD BLOOD & ARE STILL COVERING IT UP (SHEKU BAYOH) & THEY LEFT LAMARA BELL FOR 3 DAYS DYING AT SIDE O ROAD DESPITE NUMEROUS CALLS FROM PUBLIC!! I WOULD CALL THAT A FAIL..}grade_circled_b_minus_wapday_com.gif_480_480_0_64000_0_1_0


DAY 4

imageimageimageimageimageimage3 X PASS

1 x FAIL

1 x COULD DO BETTER

{NOT BAD IS THE BEST I CAN SAY}b

 


DAY 5

imageimageimageimageimageimageimage

 2 x PASS

2 x FAIL

2 x COULD DO BETTER

{MEDIOCRE AT BESTgrade_circled_b_minus_wapday_com.gif_480_480_0_64000_0_1_0.gif}

OVERALL GRADE

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{Words fail me! I’m DISGUSTED}

  www.gov.scot

HANG YOUR HEADS IN SHAME


 NICOLA STURGEON’S RESPONSE

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MY RESPONSE!

Talk about evading the issues!

“I firmly believe is the result of having a government that always puts Scotland first”

I DON’T GIVE A FLYING TOOT WHAT YOU FIRMLY BELIEVE SWEETHEART. YOU CAN BELIEVE THE MOON IS MADE OUTTA MARSHMALLOWS & FIZZ WIZZ FOR ALL I CARE. YOUR BELIEFS DO NOT ALTERED THE FACTS.

“Voters know our record is a good one, which is why they give us such ringing endorsements”

HAS SHE READ THE REPORT? WHERE IS THIS GOOD RECORD? AS FOR US BEING MORE POLITICALLY AWARE SINCE INDY REF…

A. THAT’S CAUSE WE WERE ROYALLY SHAFTED & SNP HAVE DONE FUK ALL ABOUT IT SO, WE HAVE HAD TO BE MORE AWARE.

B. YOU CANNY TAKE THE CREDIT FOR US NO BEING THICK AS MINCE!!

“Police number have reached a record high”

AYE, WE LIVE IN A POLICED STATE RIGHT ENOUGH!

& HAVE YOU MET ANY O POLICE SCOTLAND? THOSE WITH ANY BRAIN CELLS ARE CORRUPT & THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE REST…  I’M SURPRISED U HAVEN’T INTRODUCED VELCRO INSTEAD OF BUTTONS ON THEIR UNIFORMS.

“Crime is at an all time low”

SAYS WHO? POLICE SCOTLAND? THE SAME POLICE SCOTLAND THAT ADMITS FALSIFYING RECORDS? AYE??

  • OUR STEEL INDUSTRY IS GONE
  • OUR FISHING INDUSTRY GONE
  • FOODBANK USAGE UP
  • HOMELESS-NESS UP
  • POLICE SCOTLAND ARE FREE TO MURDER PEOPLE
  • CHIEF OF POLICE IS AN EX SDS & SPECIAL BRANCH FAILURE!
  • PEOPLE ARE UP IN ARMS OVER NAMED PERSON
  • 1 IN 4 SCOTS KIDS LIVE BELOW EU POVERTY LINE
  • THE CSA INQUIRY IS FARCICAL
  • YER SPRAYING US WITH CHEMICALS

ACH D’YA KNOW WHAT, I GIVE UP.

THERE’S JUST NO REASONING WI THE UNREASONABLE

 

37 famous Scots among child abuse suspects. WHERE ARE THE ARRESTS? #Sco

 

37 famous Scots among child abuse suspects

Scotsman20 May 2015

Police Scotland: Investigating 37 public figures in connection to child abuse allegations. Picture: John Devlin 

  Investigating 37 public figures in connection to child abuse allegations.

The Scottish figures were released after the NPCC said

1,400 suspects across the UK have been investigated by police looking into allegations of child sex abuse against politicians, celebrities and institutions.

In total north of the Border, there are 110 suspects, of whom 80 are named within police files. Twenty-six of the named suspects are now dead.

The oldest case dates back to 1947, and dozens of institutions, including schools and care establishments, have been identified as places where abuse is alleged to have taken place.

Assistant Chief Constable Malcolm Graham, of Police Scotland, said:

“We are fully supportive and a key part of Operation HydrantAlready, co-operation between police forces across the UK has had real benefits for investigations here in Scotland. We have a number of live investigations which are ongoing and which it would be wrong to comment on at this stage. But we are liaising with police forces elsewhere in the UK on a number of inquiries at present.” Mr Graham, who recently oversaw the creation of a National Child Abuse Investigation Unit, said child abuse investigations were becoming “increasingly complex” The challenges facing the police service to offer routes to justice for survivors of historic abuse while continuing to safeguard and protect children who are at risk of harm today, are massive,” he said. “Police Scotland will remain committed to treating all victims of sexual abuse, regardless of the passage of time, with sensitivity and respect.”

Along with the four suspects from the world of TV, film or radio, Police Scotland said 33 of its suspects had a “significant public profile” either nationally or locally. A number of these individuals have been named as being responsible for abuse within institutions, the force said.

It said 45 institutions had been identified in total, including

  • 17 educational institutions
  • 16 social care establishments
  • seven faith-based institutions
  • four leisure-based clubs/organisations
  • one health premises

The NPCC said police across the UK had seen a 71 per cent increase in their caseload for reports of child sexual abuse in just three years.

The growth is being attributed to high-profile cases such as the Jimmy Savile scandal and Operation Yewtree, which has already seen Rolf Harris and former public relations guru Max Clifford jailed for sex crimes.

Operation Hydrant does not carry out its own investigations, but gathers information from other inquiries.

As well as Yewtree, ongoing investigations include Operation Pallial, which is looking at claims of abuse in care homes in north Wales and an inquiry into Knowl View School in Rochdale, where the late MP Sir Cyril Smith is said to have abused young boys.

Investigations have also looked into an alleged Westminster paedophile ring which is said to have abused young men at the Dolphin Square flats in Pimlico, south-west London.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission is currently investigating the Metropolitan Police amid claims the initial investigation into Dolphin Square was dropped because “officers were too near prominent people”.

In Scotland, there have been allegations of sexual abuse made by former pupils at the Roman Catholic Fort Augustus School on the banks of Loch Ness. Other claims have been made by those who used to attend Nazareth House in Aberdeen and Larchgrove boys’ home in Glasgow.

Allegations have also been made against the late Conservative MP Nicholas Fairbairn and a prominent member of the legal establishment, Robert Henderson QC. Last year, Henderson’s daughter Susie waived her anonymity to allege she had been assaulted by her father and Fairbairn, both of whom are now dead, from the age of four.

She said they were members of an organised paedophile ring which abused her in her family’s Georgian house in Edinburgh’s New Town as well as other locations.

Norfolk Police chief constable Simon Bailey, NPCC’s head of child protection, said:

“These figures are stark. They indicate the scale of child abuse police are dealing with. Much public and media focus has been on horrors committed by well-known personalities, groups, gangs or in institutions, but the vast majority of victims are abused by family members or friends. Police have done a huge amount to meet the challenge: we have responded to criticism, changed how we engage with victims and how we investigate abuse. Many victims have now found confidence to report abuse, knowing we will treat them sensitively, respectfully, listen to them and take reports of their abuse seriously. I would encourage all victims of sexual abuse to come forward and report their abuse.”

Peter Wanless, chief executive for the NSPCC added:

“These astonishing figures starkly underline how child sexual abuse has infiltrated every level of society, from politics to sport and showbusiness. Figures are the tip of the iceberg”

Across the UK, the NPCC said they have seen a surge in the number of reports of abuse following the Jimmy Savile scandal three years ago.

Laying bare the sheer scale of the alleged abuse, police revealed they estimate they will receive around 116,000 reports of abuse by the end of this year – a 71 per cent increase from 2012.

According to the UK figures, 1,433 suspects have been identified and these include 261 “people of public prominence”.

Of these,

  • 76 politicians
  • 135 come from TV, film or radio
  • 43 from the music industry
  • 7 from sport.

Officers have identified 357 different institutions linked to the alleged abuse, including 

  • 154 schools
  • 75 children’s homes
  • 40 religious institutions
  • 9 prisons.

But police, experts in child sex abuse and the Home Secretary Theresa May said the figures are only the “tip of the iceberg”. Millions of people in Britain believed to have suffered sexual abuse.

Mrs May told a Police Federation conference: “We will need to face up to the changing nature of crime and the impact on police forces, including the much greater reporting of previously ignored or under-reported crimes such as child sexual abuse. found here

“I have said before that what we are seeing is only the tip of the iceberg.”


 

Young girl, posed by model

More than 2,200 suspects are being investigated by UK police probing historical child sex abuse allegations.

Figures from Operation Hydrant – which was set up by the National Police Chiefs’ Council – show the total has risen by almost 800 since May.

It includes 302 people of “public prominence”, including 99 politicians and 147 from television, film or radio.

Some 761 different institutions are now on the Hydrant database, including 288 schools and 204 children’s homes.

Operation Hydrant was set up last summer to oversee the investigation of allegations of “non-recent” child sex abuse within institutions or by people of public prominence.

It does not conduct any investigations itself, but gathers information from other inquiries carried out by police forces in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

Of the 2,228 suspects currently under investigation:

  • Some 286 are now dead, while 554 are classified as unknown or unidentified
  • Among those of public prominence, 39 come from the music industry and 17 from the world of sport
  • A total of 1,217 are alleged offenders who operated within institutions, including 86 religious institutions, 39 medical establishments and 25 prisons or young offenders institutes
  • Other institutions named include 22 sports venues, 10 community institutions, such as youth clubs, and 81 other institutions, such as guest houses
  • A further six institutions are classified as unknown

Last week, a national Operation Hydrant conference took place, bringing together police and other experts to develop new guidance for police forces investing historical abuse.

Speaking at the conference, Ch Con Simon Bailey, national policing lead for Hydrant, said: “It is important that victims continue to have the confidence to come forward and report child sexual abuse.

“However, while there has been much public focus on those investigations falling under the remit of Operation Hydrant, it is important to remember that the majority of victims are abused by family members or friends.

“By the time police are involved, it is too late, and a child has become a victim. There is therefore an important role to be played by wider society, not just by the police, in spotting the signs and achieving early interventions to prevent child sexual abuse before it happens.” found here

15,000+ seek info on child sexual exploitation during awareness campaign #Scotland

Over 15,000 seek information on child sexual exploitation during awareness campaign

Fri, Mar 18th, 2016

Minister for Children and Young People Aileen Campbell has announced that more than 15,000 people have sought information on child sexual exploitation (CSE) in the first weeks of a multi media campaign to tackle the issue.

The announcement was made on National CSE Awareness Day during a visit to Barnardo’s Scotland, which is receiving funding to expand services for those at risk.

Ms Campbell said: “Child sexual exploitation is a form of child abuse and some young people may not be aware that they are at risk of harm.

“The first step in tackling this abhorrent crime is understanding it can happen to anyone. It can take many forms – online, through social media or on phones, or in person through exploitative and damaging relationships.

“We launched the first TV campaign in the UK to raise awareness of how it can happen, and giving parents and young people access to the information they need to prevent it.

“This Government takes child protection seriously – that’s why last month we launched comprehensive review of the child protection system in Scotland,to strengthen the steps taken when children have experienced, or are at risk from harm.

“Today we have published an update of the range of actions we are taking forward now and in the future with partners including police, local government and the third sector to address this abhorrent form of child abuse. We have made great progress and will continue to strive to protect our young people and keep them safe from harm.”

The campaign, the first of its kind in the UK, highlights how to spot the warning signs of CSE. It is one of a range of actions the Scottish Government and partners are taking forward including:

  • Funding for the Moira Anderson Foundation to increase the support for young people who have experienced child sexual abuse
  • Expansion of peer education programmes to equip young people with skills to identify abusive and violent behaviours
  • Action to strengthen the response to CSE, including a new framework for Child Protection Committees and guidance on identification and risk assessment
  • Funding to Barnardo’s Scotland to deliver 150 community events to raise awareness of the issue
  • Ensuring consistent information collection across Child Protection Committee areas
  • Work to improve understanding of the scale of CSE though a new police intelligence toolkit
  • Specialist support to child abuse investigations through Police Scotland’s National Child Abuse Investigation Unit – child sexual exploitation accounted for 33 per cent of the Unit’s resource hours between April 2015 and February 2016.

Martin Crewe, director, Barnardo’s Scotland said: “Today, on National Child Sexual Exploitation Awareness day, it is worth remembering that this type of sexual abuse, especially when it takes place online, can happen to any child or young person, regardless of their upbringing or home environment.

“The funding from the Scottish Government will help us develop our services for young people in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Dundee, as well as our nationwide research and policy development programme. This work is designed to fit into the overall direction of travel set out in the updated National Action Plan on CSE, which will help make sure that there is a concerted national effort to end this form of abuse in Scotland.”

Assistant Chief Constable Malcolm Graham, Police Scotland’s Public Protection lead, said: “Child sexual exploitation is happening in Scotland and it’s happening now. Recognising the signs of exploitation early, sharing information and taking action will ensure that children are protected. This update of the CSE Action Plan comes at a crucial time as our knowledge and understanding of CSE continues to evolve.

“Young people often don’t recognise that they are being sexually exploited nor do their families or communities. And as they increasingly keep in touch with friends and organise their lives through social media and chatrooms, the online threat cannot be underestimated.

“It is imperative that we educate children, their families and communities about CSE and staying safe online. We must also share information and intelligence that will lead to the early identification of perpetrators and prevent this abuse.

“We have worked closely with Scottish Government to develop the national CSE Action Plan. We are committed to working with partners and across communities to deliver it and to reduce the risk posed by those who sexually exploit children by continually developing tactics that assist the detection and disruption of offending behaviour, in particular the continued threat posed online, in order to protect children and young people from harm.”

Children in Scotland chief executive Jackie Brock said : “This action plan shows the determination of all agencies to get to the heart of the real scale and nature of child sexual exploitation in Scotland. If the commitments by all partners are all followed through, there will no longer be a question of avoiding the challenge or claiming child sexual exploitation couldn’t happen in any of our communities.

“In addition, the plan shows a welcome commitment to investing in stronger local responses to support children, young people, their families, communities & practitioners. It can do this by preventing the underlying causes of child sexual exploitation, acting quickly when concerns emerge & tackling the behaviour & potential offending of those grooming or colluding to cause harm to children” found here


15,000 seek details of warning signs in Scottish-wide campaign to tackle child sexual exploitation

18 MAR 2016  found here

THE campaign, first of its kind in the UK, highlights how to spot the warning signs of young people being manipulated, forced, pressurised or coerced into taking part in a sexual act.

Aileen Campbell MSP, Minister for Children & Young People

MORE than 15,000 people have sought information on the signs of a child being sexually exploited in the first weeks of a new Scotland-wide campaign.

Aileen Campbell, minister for children and young people, made the announcement today during a visit in Edinburgh to Barnardo’s Scotland, which is receiving a £300,000 grant in April to expand services for those at risk.

The campaign, the first of its kind in the UK, highlights how to spot the warning signs of young people being manipulated, forced, pressurised or coerced into taking part in a sexual act in exchange for something.

Ms Campbell also announced an updated action plan to tackle child sexual exploitation including extra support for child abuse investigations through Police Scotland’s specialist national unit.

She said: “ Child sexual exploitation is a form of child abuse and some young people may not be aware that they are at risk of harm.

“The first step in tackling this abhorrent crime is understanding it can happen to anyone. It can take many forms – online, through social media or on phones, or in person through exploitative and damaging relationships.

“We launched the first TV campaign in the UK to raise awareness of how it can happen and giving parents and young people access to the information they need to prevent it.

“We have made great progress and will continue to strive to protect our young people and keep them safe from harm.

CSE THE SIGNS Campaign Website (Info below) has been visited by 15,755 unique users since its launch in January.

CSE-The-Signs

CSE THE SIGNS Scotland

1.   Are they suffering severe mood swings? 

Mood swings in themselves are nothing unusual but does gut instinct tell you the ones your child is experiencing are something different entirely? Many parents of sexually exploited children report that their child appears to have developed a completely different personality. 

2.   Have they become unusually secretive?

Has your child stopped talking about their day at school or where they’ve been and who with?

3.   Is your child late home or skipping school?

Has your child started coming home later than they were supposed to or even staying out overnight with no notice? Have they been skipping classes or missing school altogether?

4.   Are they acting differently when they access the internet? 

Has your child started becoming overly protective of their phone, tablet or computer, as if they don’t want you to see who’s contacting or messaging them? Alternatively, are they avoiding their phone or laptop altogether as if they’re scared to hear from someone?

5.   Is your child in possession of expensive, new things?

Things like mobile phones, iPods or jewellery that you didn’t buy them and that you know they don’t have the money to buy themselves?

6.   Have their tastes changed suddenly? 

Is your child dressing differently – in a more revealing way perhaps? Have they started listening to a new style of music? Or swapped one friend or group of friends for another?

7.   Do they have unexplained marks and scars?

Have you noticed your child trying to conceal unexplained marks and scars by covering themselves up or wearing loose clothing? When you ask about them, do they avoid giving you a clear answer?

8.   Are they being picked up or dropped off by people you don’t know?

Abusers may groom young people by offering to give them lifts. 

9.   Are they drinking or taking drugs on a regular basis? 

Offenders may introduce young people to drugs and alcohol as a way of controlling them and creating dependency


 Child sex exploitation: Figures showing 266 young victims last year ‘may just be tip of the iceberg’

 

Where Are Our Bairns? Scotland’s Missing Kids

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children 1st.org.uk

 

SCOTLAND’S MISSING KIDS

Toll of kids missing from school

  • 16 December 2014
teenager
Some children go missing after being abused while others are taken out of the country

More than 2,600 children as young as three have disappeared from Scottish schools for prolonged periods of time and some never found, according to new figures obtained by the BBC.

In some cases, children are marked as missing because they have moved house and failed to tell the school.

Agencies say others disappear for more “sinister” reasons including abuse and forced marriage.

In the past five years, 2,619 children aged three to 16 have gone missing.

The figures, obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, include 719 children going missing in the past year.

Children are categorised as “missing in education” if the authorities are unable to track them down from four weeks or more – or two to three days in the case of vulnerable children .

Some 24 children were never traced – in the main because authorities say they moved abroad.

Several of the councils said they do not record those who are “not returned” and do not know about or record cases of forced marriage.

Fife council said that in one case “the family moved to France” but it was “never verified”.

Real problem

Specialist agencies say in addition to the children recorded as missing from school, there are others who disappear without being monitored because families tell a plausible story to the school before. for example. forcing the child to marry abroad.

One specialist agency worker, who cannot be identified for safety reasons, said:

“Children going missing is significant to begin with and should worry everyone.”

“Children going missing but not being reported missing, now that is a real problem.”

“Now, if the parents are not going to go forward to report a child missing either because they have been taken out of the country, or they have been subjected to all sorts of horrors like female genital mutilation, like forced marriage, they could have been abducted and sold as a bride…that is a real, real worry.”

A system was created to record and report missing children after the murder of five-year-old Danielle Reid in Inverness in 2002. Her body was not found for three months, partly because her mother told the authorities she had moved to a school in Manchester.

Ministers announced the Children Missing in Education system in 2005 with a unique identifying number for each child to track pupils between schools and council areas.

children
Schools are not always informed when children move away with parents

The inquiry following Danielle’s murder stated: “If we do not share in the early detection and support of Scotland’s vulnerable children, then the consequences of their subsequent neglect and abuse will re-visit us for many generations to come.”

The system means most missing children should be recorded but the figures also show that some children have not been traced for 10 months and others have never been located.

Earlier this year, the Jay report inquiry in Rotherham revealed “shocking levels” of abuse and highlighted links between children who go missing and sexual exploitation.

Children that have been recorded as “missing in education” in the past five years

1,385 in Glasgow

267 in Fife

164 in North Lanarkshire

4 in South Lanarkshire

22 in Edinburgh.

A Scottish government spokesman said: “These are concerning figures and we are currently looking at how we can tackle the issue of children missing from education.

“The Scottish government is committed to ensuring the safety and wellbeing of Scotland’s children and young people, and education and school staff play a crucial role in the support and protection of children.

“The national Children Missing from Education Guidance emphasises that where there is any concern that a child may be at risk, child protection procedures should be followed.

“We support local partners on the ground to continually improve child protection measures, including protecting children from risk of harm and neglect. This ensures children get the help they need when they need it.”

The spokesman added: “Forced marriage and child sexual exploitation are abhorrent crimes. We continue to work with local authorities, law enforcement agencies, children’s charities and other third sector organisations, as well as Parliament, to tackle child sexual exploitation and we legislated in 2011 to protect those in or at risk of being forced into a marriage.

“From 30 September 2014, the Scottish government created an additional layer of protection by making it a criminal offence to force someone into marriage.”

‘Robust procedures’

A spokesman for North Lanarkshire Council’s Learning and Leisure Services, said: “We have robust procedures in place and, when a child or young person is registered as being missing, a thorough investigation is immediately carried out.

“The reasons for a child or young person being classified as missing include returning to their original country, moving to another school in the UK or being home educated.

“We work closely with The Children Missing from Education (Scotland) (CMES) Service to ensure all cases are investigated thoroughly.”

A City of Edinburgh Council spokesman said: “We have very strict protocols in place for identifying children who may be, for whatever reason, not receiving an education.

“These include checks by their schools, the involvement of education welfare officers and other local authorities, right through to the Scottish government and Interpol.

“Although there are often quite straightforward reasons why children may not be at school, it’s important we carry out all the checks we can to ensure their welfare.”

A spokeswoman for Glasgow City Council said: “Glasgow has a very transient population with approximately a class of 25 in and out of the city each week.




 

ScotGovt PDF   CHILDREN MISSING IN EDUCATION

Search is still on for over 500 missing people in Scotland




Missing from care in Scotland

Missing children rate rises

15 January 2014
Committee Convener David Stewart MSP pictured as The Public Petitions Committee launches its report on tackling child sexual exploitation in Scotland.

Courier country children in council care went missing at a rate of more than one a week last year.

Sixty young people cared for in facilities run by local authorities were reported as having gone missing in Falkirk, Stirling, Dundee and Fife during the 2012/13 financial year.

The figures were obtained under freedom of information legislation but the total could actually be higher as Angus Council returned figures for the calendar year, with six children reported as missing in 2013.

Clackmannanshire Council and Perth and Kinross Council reported no missing children last year.

The children reported missing from homes or facilities run by Fife Council jumped from three in 2011/12 to 33 in 2012/13.

However, the council stressed the process of recording was changed in 2012, hence the increase in figures which in turn has affected the overall total throughout Courier Country.

Matt Forde, national head of services for NSPCC Scotland, said it was vital to establish why children run away.

“The reasons that children go missing from care are many and varied, making it all the more important we take the time to listen and help them work through their particular issues,” he said.

“It could be that they miss their friends and family, are being bullied, or simply haven’t settled in their placement.

“Equally, we have to be vigilant to the potential for abuse. Going missing is a real red flag in terms of the risk of sexual exploitation.

“This in itself is a particularly difficult issue because children often don’t see themselves as being exploited, not to mention unhelpful myths that get in the way of professionals and adults tackling the problem, such as the view that these are ‘lifestyle choices.’”

All the councils follow clear procedures when a child goes missing.

In Dundee the number of missing children fell from 16 in 2011/12 to 12 in 2012/13.

A council spokeswoman said: “If a child has placed themselves at risk we will always act.”

The number who failed to return in Stirling fell from seven in 2011/12 to five in 2012/13.

Val de Souza, head of social services and chief social work officer, said: “Whilst the number of young people absconding or being reported missing has fallen in recent years, we remain vigilant and we work closely with Police Scotland to ensure their safe return.

“We then seek to work with the young person to understand their motivation and to help prevent any recurrence.”

In Angus the figure dropped from seven in 2012 to six last year.

A council spokeswoman said: “When a child goes missing from our care we report this to the police.”

And a Perth and Kinross Council spokeswoman said: “Should a child or young person go missing, we have procedures in place where carer/parents/guardians, the police and other relevant public agencies would be contacted.”

And in Falkirk the number of children who failed to return also fell from 13 to 10 in the last two financial years.

A council spokeswoman said: “There is a clear and well-followed procedure in place for dealing with children reported as missing from any council facility.

“Any child who persistently goes missing can also be referred to Police Scotland’s Youth Runaways Project.”


 

 PDF       CHILDREN 1ST MISSING CHILDREN STRATEGY 2015


 

 CHILD PROTECTION IN FIFE

Missing Children

 Children and Young People Missing From Local Authority Care – Joint Protocol

Child Protection Committees are required to ensure there are multi-agency policies, procedures and systems in place for the identifying, referring and responding to situations where young people place themselves at risk through their own behaviour.

 Research has shown that around 9000 young people in Scotland run away from home each year, 1 in 6 children have reported being physically or sexually assaulted whilst missing. In Fife, during 2009-2010, 972 young people were reported missing from residential care establishments.

 


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New Campaign to Find Missing Children in Scotland
4 June 2004

Every year 9,000 children go missing in Scotland.
For the UK as a whole, over 77,000 children go missing every year.

Speed is critical in locating missing and abducted children. Modern technology offers a unique way in which the public, Police, NGOs and the private sector can work together better to protect our children.

On 4 June, 2004, the Scottish Police will celebrate the official launch of their accession to the UK Missing Kids Website, at 11.00 am, Scottish Criminal Record Office, Glasgow, Scotland




 

#NSPCC #ChildAbuse #Statistics #UK

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The most comprehensive overview of child protection in UK

How safe are our children? 2015 cover

Our report compiles and analyses the most robust and up-to-date child protection data that exists across the 4 nations in the UK for 2015.

The report sets out 20 different indicators. Each indicator looks at the question of ‘how safe are our children?’ from a different perspective. They also include historic data, to help track progress over time.

Authors: Sonja Jutte, Holly Bentley, Dan Tallis, Julia Mayes, Natasha Jetha, Orla O’Hagan, Helen Brookes, Nicola McConnell
Published: 2015

  • All 4 countries in the UK have seen the number of recorded sexual offences against children increase over the last year.
  • There’s been an increase in contacts to the NSPCC helpline and ChildLine about sexual abuse.
  • Neglect remains the most common form of child abuse in the UK.
  • The number of children dying as a result of homicide or assault remains in long term decline.

Statistics on child abuse

How many children are abused or neglected in the UK

We don’t know exactly how many children in the UK are victims of child abuse. Child abuse is usually hidden from view and children may be too young, too scared or too ashamed to tell anyone about what is happening to them.

However, there are a number of different sources of information, including official government statistics and academic research. These give us an indication of the number of children who are affected by abuse.

There are currently over 50,000 children identified as needing protection from abuse in the UK

Source: Child protection register and plan statistics for all UK nations for 2014.

Explanation: There were 56,231 children in the UK on child protection registers or the subject of child protection plans on 31 March 2014 (or 31 July 2014 in Scotland). This is based on figures from each UK nation.

See our summary of child protection register statistics in the UK (PDF).

Over 29,000 children & young people talked to ChildLine about abuse last year

Explanation: In 2014/15 ChildLine carried out 29,126 counselling sessions with children and young people about some form of abuse.

To find out more see our most recent ChildLine annual report

illustration of umbrella

We estimate that for every child identified as needing protection from abuse, another 8 are suffering abuse

Explanation: For every child placed on a child protection plan or the child protection register, we estimate there are another 8 children who are suffering from abuse and neglect and not getting the support they need.

Our calculation is based on the proportion of children who experienced maltreatment at the hands of their parents/carers in the previous year identified through research compared with the number of children who are on a child protection plan or the child protection register. To find out more see our annual report

 


Sexual abuse Facts and statistics

Official statistics, published annually, show the amount of child sexual abuse recorded by authorities in the year. The problem is much bigger than shown in official statistics, as most crimes are not disclosed and/or reported.

Most sexual abuse isn’t reported, detected or prosecuted. Most children don’t tell anyone that they’re being sexually abused. It’s a crime that is usually only witnessed by the abuser and the victim.

1 in 20 children in the UK have been sexually abused

1 in every 3 children sexually abused by an adult did not tell anyone

Over 90% of sexually abused children were abused by someone they knew

Over 2,800 children were identified as needing protection from sexual abuse last year

14% of contacts to the NSPCC’s helpline last year were concerns about sexual abuse

The NSPCC’s helpline responded to over 8,800 contacts about sexual abuse last year

People

There were over 11,000 counselling sessions with children & young people who talked to ChildLine in 2015/16 about sexual abuse–Increase of 8% since 2013/14

There were over 3,000 counselling sessions with young people who talked to ChildLine last year about online sexual abuse – an 11% increase on 2013/14.

People

Over 36,000 sexual offences against children were recorded in the UK last year

Child sexual abuse costs the UK £3.2bn a year

Nearly 30,000 registered offenders have been convicted of offences against children.

Over one third of sexual offences recorded by the police are against children

Please visit N S P C C Website for more information

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Related

CHILD SEX ABUSE NUMBERS DOUBLE

Doubling in number of child sex abuse victims seeking help from Barnardo’s

Doubling in number of child sex abuse victims seeking help from Barnardo’s

Doubling in number of child sex abuse victims seeking help from Barnardo's
Monday 1 February 2016 / Home News

A surge in the number of children as young as 10 seeking help for sex abuse has seen demand on services more than double in just five years, according to Barnardo’s.

The charity said it is in desperate need of a £500,000 funding injection to cope with a 169% increase across the UK for its experts, after providing help to 3,200 vulnerable children last year alone.

The figure is more than twice the 1,190 children who were helped by Barnardo’s in 2010 and the charity warned it is finding victims “everywhere”.

Barnardo’s chief executive Javed Khan said widespread publicity of high-profile sex abuse cases in recent years had helped to raise awareness that in turn has helped the charity to identify sufferers and children at risk.

He said: “We urgently need more funds to give sexually exploited children the vital support they need. Every penny the public gives will help us make a difference to a young person’s life.

“High profile child sexual exploitation cases across the UK have raised people’s awareness about sexual exploitation and what it is. This has led to better identification of victims and those at risk but everywhere we go we find more young people needing our services.
“We all need to be aware any child can become a victim of this horrific form of abuse, regardless of where they live or their background. Barnardo’s will always strive to help protect these vulnerable children.”

As referrals have rocketed the charity has increased its capacity, opening 11 new services in the last 12 months.

The charity now has 59 centres around the country where its experts support victims of child sexual exploitation, some who are just 10 years old.

However they say the current coverage “is not enough” as they appealed for extra funds to deal with the “horrific” abuse children are suffering.

An NSPCC spokesman said: “Reports to police about child sexual abuse are at record levels, but current services do not reflect this surge. We also know recorded abuse is just scratching the surface of the total number of victims out there.
“As more and more children bravely speak out against their abusers it’s vital therapeutic services are there to help them move forward positively from their horrendous experiences. Last week we launched our Its Time campaign to pressurise the Government into prioritising this vulnerable and often forgotten group of children.”

After Rotherham, pleas for help from child abuse victims soar

Yorkshire Post1 Feb 2016
A SURGE in the number of children as young as 10 seeking help for sex abuse has seen demand on services more than double in just five years amid warnings that charities are being inundated by victims desperate for help in the wake of cases such as the Rotherham scandal.

Senior officials at the Barnardo’s charity have revealed that they need £500,000 in funding to cope with a 169 per cent increase across the UK for expert advice and support, after providing help to 3,200 vulnerable children last year alone. The figure is more than twice the 1,190 children who were helped by Barnardo’s in 2010 and the charity warned it is finding victims “everywhere”.

Barnardo’s chief executive Javed Khan said widespread publicity of high-profile sex abuse cases in recent years had helped to raise awareness that in turn has helped the charity to identify sufferers and children at risk.

He said: “We urgently need more funds to give sexually exploited children the vital support they need. Every penny the public gives will help us make a difference to a young person’s life.

“High profile child sexual exploitation cases across the UK have raised people’s awareness about sexual exploitation and what it is. This has led to better identification of victims and those at risk but everywhere we go we find more young people needing our services.

“We all need to be aware any child can become a victim of this horrific form of abuse, regardless of where they live or their background. Barnardo’s will always strive to help protect these vulnerable children.”

As referrals have rocketed, the charity has increased its capacity, opening 11 new services in the last 12 months.

The charity now has 59 centres around the country where its experts support victims of child sexual exploitation, some who are just 10 years old. However, the charity’s officials say the current coverage “is not enough” as they appealed for extra funds to deal with the “horrific” abuse children are suffering.

The Shadow Minister for Preventing Abuse, Sarah Champion, warned last month that child sex abuse is a “national epidemic” and parents should be supported to recognise the warnings signs to keep youngsters safe.

The Labour MP for Rotherham cited the proliferation of pornography as a key reason for the increasing danger to youngsters, and digital technology which has increased image and video sharing online.

The South Yorkshire town has been at the centre of a national scandal after a report by Prof Alexis Jay, which was published in August 2014, revealed the shocking scale of child grooming in Rotherham between 1997 and 2013, with 1,400 children abused as local authorities failed to tackle the problem.

A separate scandal involving disgraced Leeds-born DJ and broadcaster Jimmy Savile, which has seen hundreds of victims come forward to say that he had abused them, also brought the issue of child sex exploitation under intense public scrutiny. Savile died in 2011, before the allegations against him emerged.


GORDON BROWN: Dunblane, Maddie, Harry Potter & P.I.E

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James Gordon Brown is a British Labour politician and former UK Prime Minister.

He attended the Bilderberg group in 1991.

Brown’s Nuclear Stance

Private Eye reported in February 2006 that Gordon Brown has family connections to the nuclear industry. His younger brother Andrew Brown works for EDF Energy, the UK subsidiary of EDF, which operates nuclear power stations in France. Andrew Brown was appointed as EDF Energy’s Head of Press on 13 September 2004. Previously, he worked for the lobbying company Weber Shandwick.[1][2]
One of Brown’s key advisors is Ed Balls, whose father-in-law Tony Cooper is a long-standing nuclear lobbyist. [3] [4]
For further information on Brown’s nuclear position, see the relevant Sourcewatch page on Gordon Brown

Wielding great influence on British Jewry

In 2008, The Jewish Chronicle declared ‘the top spots’ on their second annual list of those who ‘wield the greatest influence on British Jewry’. Brown is listed at number 29[5]. The criteria for being listed is described as ‘those with a vision for Jewish life in this country and who did their utmost to bring it about using either money; persuasion; religion; culture; political or social leadership; or simply inspiring through word and deed’. In order for someone to be listed in the top 20, it was generally necessary to demonstrate influence in more than one of the spheres[6].
The article describes how…
The Prime Minister may not have Tony Blair’s natural affinity with the Jewish community, but he has built on the good relations established by his predecessor. The government has extended its financial backing of sixth-formers’ visits to Auschwitz and Mr Brown has accepted an invitation to become a JNF patron. To rapturous applause, he told a Board of Deputies dinner last year: “Israel will always have our support. We will be a friend in good times and bad and we will never compromise our friendship for political expediency.” He is an admirer of the Chief Rabbi, whom he says he consults regularly’.[5]
Others included in the list were Lord Levy (number 9), Ron Prosor (number 10), Daniel Finkelstein (number 11), John Mann (number 17), Jonathan Freedland (number 18), Julia Neuberger (number 19), Lord Janner (number 20), Trevor Chinn (number 14) & Poju Zabludowicz (number 30).
Gertrude Himmelfarb
According to Paul Richards, Brown is a longstanding admirer of Gertrude Himmelfarb:
Brown’s admiration of Himmelfarb was fostered in the 1970s, when he was an earnest undergraduate, and remained with him as a politics lecturer at Glasgow College of Technology. In 2008 he wrote: “I have long admired Gertrude Himmelfarb’s historical work, in particular her love of the history of ideas, and her work has stayed with me ever since I was a history student at Edinburgh University.”[7]  In Full Here


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Gerry McCann made his speech at the Police Bravery Awards attended by Prince Charles and Gordon Brown.

July proved a difficult month for the McCanns. Three of their Tapas friends were reinterviewed in Portimão on Wednesday July 11, 2007. Gerry McCann returned to London the same day as a guest of Gordon Brown and Prince Charles at the Police Bravery Awards sponsored by the Sun Newspaper. Gerry tried to disguise this because in his blog he didn’t mention who had invited him and he entered the blog entry on Thursday July 12, 2007. The event took place on the evening of July 11 – the previous night. Gerry’s presence there was to meet with Brown and Prince Charles. Note: Many websites have repeated this error and reported Gerry’s presence in London as taking place on the Thursday.
http://chrisspivey.org/big-ears-brown-and-those-48-unanswered-questions-kate-mccann-refused-to-answer/


I WAS ABUSED BY GORDON BROWN
Survivors Story

I just wanted to say, that yes, I have also been abused by Mr. Gordon Brown, long before he was prime minister (1980s/1990s).
It sounds as crazy as it does, but this is what I remember and it is not a “false memory”.
Since I have been systematically drugged (with LSD, psychiatric drugs and so forth) from a very young age on (at least since “toddler” age, I think even before that), I was explicitly used for “drug experimentation”, as one of the psychiatrists involved said.
So this lead to certain parts of my brain not functioning as much as they should, so I was often told by my parents that I am “blind”, not blind in the sense that my two eyes are not functioning, but I think you would know what I am trying to express.
Anyway, the point is, one of my parents told me, before I was given to Mr. Brown, something along the lines of: “Don’t worry boy, he (Mr. Brown) is a ‘gentle’ guy, he won’t hurt you as much” and also “and he is also partially blind, just like you”, so as to artificially comfort me.
So Mr. Brown is partially blind, not like me though, but with one of his two eyes.
I remember lying on my back on a bed somewhere in England as a young boy, and Mr. Brown over me, handing me a pill and I remember seeing him (he showed me the profile of his face, trying not to look at me directly at that point) in the corridor of that house where I was in, before I was taken to the room where the abuse took place.
As “crazy” or surreal as this may sound, these are real memories and like I said, this is in the 1980s or early 1990s.
Also, I am afraid another “high up” guy abused me, who was close to Mr. Brown. But I wanted to say what I wrote now, because this is what I can say so far.
I am not sure I can post this “publicly”, maybe I can?
Additionally I wonder, are these kind of people “touchable” at all?
This is not made up stuff, but how to go about this? Should I look for a lawyer?
I don’t expect you to have all the answers, I am just trying to find a way forward I guess.
Full story here http://whistleblowerkids.uk/other-cases/abuse-survivors/i-was-abused-by-gordon-brown/


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AANGIRFAN
http://aangirfan.blogspot.co.uk/2008/08/gordon-brown-and-his-trainer.html?m=1


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http://aangirfan.blogspot.co.uk/2007/06/paddy-ashdown-mi6-gordon-brown.html?m=1


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http://aangirfan.blogspot.co.uk/2009/04/j-k-rowling-gordon-brown-and-spooky.html?m=1

REVEALED:  British Premier Gordon Brown  Is A Paedophile

By Mike James in Germany   28 Feb 2010
http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk

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In the early months of 2003, just prior to the illegal invasion of Iraq, and working in conjunction with a London-based freelance journalist who had thoroughly double-checked exposures published by the Scottish ‘Sunday Herald’ newspaper, I publicised details of a child-sex ring linked to senior ministers within the Blair government.

I initially published my findings, stemming from discreet leaks from a secret list provided by the American FBI to the ‘Sunday Times’ newspaper, and concomitantly discovered that Tony Blair had issued a gagging order to suppress all further discussion of a scandal that would most certainly have brought a swift end to his administration and made Britain’s collusion in the destruction of Iraq impossible.

The articles I wrote concerning the “Operation Ore” cover-up and the 100-year blackout order imposed upon the report concerning the Dunblane massacre of children used and abused by senior Scottish Labour government ministers can still be found here:

Cremation of Care: The New World Order and the Dunblane Shootings
www.cremationofcare.com/the_nwo_dunblane.htm

[2003] Dunblane Secret Documents Contain Letters by Tory and Labour Ministers
[2003] Tony Blair Caught Protecting Elite Paedophile Ring By Mike James

[2003 Jan] Alleged Pedophiles Helm Blair’s War Room by MIKE JAMES

[Media March 2003] Dunblane secret documents contain letters by Tory and Labour ministers

These stories, which also implicated the Attorney-General Lord Goldsmith, former NATO Boss Lord Robertson, and the Svengali of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown’s rise to power, the flamboyant homosexual Peter Mandelson (now Lord Mandelson), were widely publicised on the Internet, excited debate within numerous online forums, and inspired Robert Kilroy-Silk’s former Veritas Party to undertake a detailed examination of the extent to which senior and junior ministers close to Gordon Brown were given free licence to engage in paedophiliac activities under the protection of the British intelligence services.

The Sunday Herald’s incendiary story (“Child Porn Arrests Too Slow”, 19 January 2003), written by its Home Affair’s correspondent Neil Mackay, disappeared rapidly from the Internet within weeks of my exposure. Mackay’s editor, at first cooperative, subsequently refused to answer any further enquiries put to him by myself and the freelance journalist Bob Kearley.

Each and every letter I sent to the British Home Office, Scotland Yard and the Sunday Times solicited not one single reply.

Lord Robertson, a self-confessed Freemasonic member of Edinburgh’s sinister “Speculative Society” lodge, who enjoyed a peculiarly close personal relationship with Thomas Hamilton, the mass murderer of abused children in Dunblane, failed to sue the Sunday Herald for libel and promptly disappeared from public life. Police records revealed that Robertson had helped expedite the process by which the Manchurian Candidate, Hamilton, already a convicted child molester with known affiliations to the British elite, was able to obtain gun licenses.

Roberston worked in collusion with Michael Forsyth (Secretary of State for Scotland), a fellow “Speculative Freemason” and Robert Bell, an associate of Malcolm Rifkind (British Foreign Secretary). Robertson, at the behest of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, had a vested interest in ‘wasting’ children who were beginning to talk.
Full Story Here   http://www.whale.to/b/james9.html


Gordon Brown & The Sex Offenders Register

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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2836107/How-Gordon-Brown-duped-aiding-founder-vile-paedophile-group-Paedophile-Information-Exchange-infiltrated-gay-rights-rally-hoodwinking-future-PM.html


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Gordon Brown (former PM of the UK)
Brown is known for sexually abusing numerous boys, as well as girls. He is known for a particularly vile rape in Aberdeen in the 70’s, when he and 2 others paid a prostitute for access to her 9 year old daughter. They all raped her several times, and some years later the girl went to court to get custody of her little brother because of her mother’s abuse, and drug use. She won the case and has had custody of him ever since. The records have vanished from court, but the victim still remembers what happened, and who did it.
Taken frm here 

http://www.seancopland.com/articles/sex_offenders_register_free_search.html


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#ChildSexualAbuse & #Missing Kids Statistics #UK & #USA {2014}

International Statistics on Child Abuse

40 million children subjected to abuse each year

Suicide is the third leading cause of death among adolescents worldwide.

30% of severely disabled children in special homes in the Ukraine die before 18 years of age.

Approximately 20% of women and 5–10% of men report being sexually abused as children

25–50% of all children report being physically abused.

Statistics indicate that 3 million young girls are subjected to genital mutilation every year.


Last Updated: Sunday, 23 March 2014

Child Abuse Statistics  International & U.S.

Full Info on USA http://arkofhopeforchildren.org/child-abuse/child-abuse-statistics-info

Statistics compiled by Ark of Hope for Children Gainesville, FL hope  ldren.org


 

CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE IN USA

Child rape occurs every two minutes

1 in 3 girls will be sexually molested before the age 17

1 in 6 boys will be sexually molested before the age 17 (1 in 5 in Canada)

A sex offender will molest an average of 120 victims, most of whom do not report it

90% of molesters abuse children they know

Oftentimes, a sexually abused child is abused in other ways

Overall U.S. child abuse statistics

Every 10 seconds a child is abused or raped

3.3 million child abuse reports in 2010

For every report 2 more go unreported = many millions abused annually

61,000 reports to Child Protective services per week = 6 per minute

Of 1.5 million runaways 85% are fleeing some form of abuse

Only 10% of abusers do not know their abuser well

Abuse victims = about 48% male, 52% female

Every race and religion sees child abuse

The effects of UNTREATED child abuse

38% increase arrest rate for violent crimes

84% of all prison inmates had been abused as a child

59% more likely to be arrested as a juvenile

28% more likely to be arrested as an adult

30% more likely to commit violent crime

65%+ of people in treatment for drug abuse have been maltreated as a child

25% less likely to practice safe sex, putting them at a greater risk for STD’s

82% *CAN* grow up to be pedophiles themselves

80% meet criteria for at least one psychological disorder as adults

Long-term consequences such as chronic illness due to untreated wounds

Child death and suicide related to abuse

1,850 children die a year from some form of abuse = 7+ children PER DAY in the U.S.

80% of the children that die each day are under the age of four

TODAY 6 children will commit suicide due to child abuse

Estimated 60% of child deaths caused by abuse are not recorded as such on death certificates

Source

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MISSING CHILDREN

http://abcnews.go.com/US/missing-children-america-unsolved-cases/story?id=19126967

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CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE IN UK

http://www.nspcc.org.uk/preventing-abuse/child-abuse-and-neglect/child-sexual-abuse/sexual-abuse-facts-statistics/

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Full Info On UK


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NSPCC 

NSPCC WITLESS REPORTImage result for child abuse uk

 

 

 

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