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REPORT
Six-year-old offenders will be sent to
boot camps
Shoplifters, joy-riders and tearaways as young as six
are to be sent to military training camps under a government attempt to
instil discipline in disruptive children, with those succeeding winning
a place with a military cadet force. Young offenders who commit crimes
such as burglary, car theft or shoplifting will be sent to the camps as
part of their sentence where they will be subjected to a gruelling
regime which teaches punctuality, respect and physical fitness. The
programme, designed by the Youth Justice Board and Ministry of Defence,
will also be tailored to primary-school children showing early signs of
aggressive or disruptive behaviour. Those who successfully complete the
military programmes will not only win a certificate but automatic
referral to a cadet force. The Army has a recruitment drive aimed at
young people from all backgrounds. The children will learn to obey
orders and meet strict standards of discipline, cleanliness and fitness,
as well as having access to Army assault courses and adventure
activities. The scheme, expected to be rolled out across England and
Wales after pilot trials, is similar to America's "boot camps" for
disruptive children.
In the past month, joint projects have been
established between youth-offending teams and the Devonshire and Dorset
Regiment, RAF Halton, and the Royal Navy's Sea Cadet Corps. They are
expected to begin within months. Children aged between six and 12,
identified by youth justice teams as at risk of offending, will be
offered a programme likely to include camping and survival skills;
teenagers will be offered more demanding programmes such as running
assault courses, learning drills, and exercise. The MoD has been brought
in to try to divert delinquent young people from a life of crime with
tough training programmes that could lead to a boost in military
recruitment. The ministry has a new youth policy unit working with the
youth justice board to use military structures and skills. A spokeswoman
for the youth justice board said the move was also designed to “improve
the potential for recruitment into the Armed Forces”. She added: “The
intention is to work in partnership to achieve community engagement.
“From the MoD's point of view, they can improve the lives of children
and the communities in which they live, while benefiting from gaining a
positive image in these communities and in doing so, improve the
potential for recruitment to the Armed Forces. “The partnership allows
the YJB and youth-offending teams to utilise the resources available in
the Armed Forces to enhance their work in preventing youth-offending and
re-offending.”
But some civil liberties groups are wary. “We would
certainly welcome any attempt to rehabilitate youngsters and it may be
that a stint in the Army may be a good thing,” Barry Hugill of Liberty
said. “But I hope recruitment to the Army is not going to be based on
the notion that we will take any former offender.” The projects, a
mixture of residential and daily courses, will include work to increase
the self-esteem of youngsters and help them develop team-working and
leadership skills. The first young people will start the courses early
next year. Experts from the youth justice board are drawing up
programmes to address offending behaviour, tailored to specific
offences. The organisers hope the youngsters will “develop long-term
links with the military to help them stay away from crime”.
Marie Woolf
26 October 2004
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/crime/story.jsp?story=576069
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