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Welsh pressure for ban on smacking

Posted: 31 October 2002 | Subscribe Online


The Welsh assembly has stepped up pressure on the government to outlaw the smacking of children.

Health and social services minister Jane Hutt told the assembly that physical punishment of children was inappropriate. She announced the setting up of a new code that would help to support parents and provide positive alternatives to deal with discipline. She said the new code, backed by £50,000 from the Welsh assembly, would be developed with the umbrella charity Children in Wales and the National Family and Parenting Institute. The first materials are expected next spring.
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Meanwhile, Labour MP for Lancaster and Wyre Hilton Dawson told a debate in the House of Commons last week that the law on smacking was "stuck in the time of Dickens".

Dawson, a former social worker and parliamentary ambassador for the NSPCC, said: "The 1860 law of reasonable chastisement was hatched at a time when sending children up chimneys was considered reasonable."

Calling for the law to be modernised and brought in line with other countries, Dawson added: "[The current law] allows and encourages harsh and frequent physical punishment of children, which most caring parents would consider cruel."

The debate on a ban on smacking was re-ignited by a UN report on the rights of the child released last month, which criticised the government for failing to address the issue (News, page 10, 10 October).


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