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UK
A generation of British children are being "demonised"
because of hysteria over teenage crime, says the Government's youth
justice tsar.
Children damned by crime 'hysteria'
Professor Rod Morgan, the Government's chief adviser
on youth crime, has issued a warning that children as young as 10 have
"the mark of Cain on their foreheads" because of the furore over
anti-social behaviour. Calling for a radical rethink on how unruly
teenagers are dealt with, Morgan says discretion should be exercised in
cases where children are sent to court for offences that would once have
earned a slap on the wrist. His comments will alarm British ministers
who have trumpeted the success of their anti-yob policies, claiming that
they are ridding areas of teenage gangs as well as bringing respect back
to communities.
Prime Minister Tony Blair has said anti-social
behaviour orders (Asbos) are a successful element of the Government's
law and order strategy. Since their introduction in 1999, more than 2000
Asbos have been issued throughout the country in an effort to tackle
offending. But in some cases, young children are given Asbos lasting up
to 10 years, covering the whole of their teenage years. Record numbers
of children are being sent to court, although the actual level of youth
offending has remained the same over the past decade.
Ten years ago about a third of the 200,000 children in
the criminal justice system every year went to court. Today the figure
is closer to half. Morgan said: "There are adverse consequences of
fixing a mark of Cain to a child's forehead ... The argument is that if
you give a dog a bad name then the dog may live up to the name." Morgan,
chairman of the Youth Justice Board, said children were being sent to
court for trivial offences such as swearing in the playground or
breaking windows.
Teachers and parents should instead be reprimanding
children, rather than police arresting them, and more use should be made
of early prevention schemes such as dedicated police officers in
schools. Children's charities are warning that police are also seeing
children as "soft targets" to raise their conviction rates. And they
blame the widening gulf between adults and children for the fact young
people are now feared rather than cherished. Liberty, the human rights
group, is threatening to expose the Government's poor record on how
children are treated in Britain when it reports to the UN next year.
Shami Chakrabati, its director, said that
criminalising children had become a national "obsession". "I get more
hate mail for sticking up for kids than for terror suspects," she said.
Sophie Goodchild
24 April 2006
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10378635
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