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Children 'will remain at risk' under new domestic violence legislation

Posted: 26 February 2004 | Subscribe Online


The government's new proposals on domestic violence fail to adequately protect children from abusive fathers, an expert has warned.

Alan Coombe, a policy and practice manager at children's charity Barnardo's, said last week that the domestic violence bill, published last December, "fell short" of addressing the needs of children.

He said the bill did not consider the issues of contact with children granted by the family courts in cases where there had been allegations or concerns about domestic violence.
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Some of the fathers in these cases went on to kill their children, Coombe said. To tackle this, he urged the introduction of risk assessments and for children to be listened to. Children should be given long enough to be able to open up about how they feel.

Coombe, who was speaking at a conference on children and young people, concluded that in cases where there were concerns about domestic violence all contact with fathers should be supervised to ensure children's safety.

He called on the government to ensure that every local authority had a place where such meetings could take place, such as children's centres, and to resource them accordingly.

He said he had received reassurances from the home secretary David Blunkett and the children's minister Margaret Hodge that the effects of domestic violence on children would not fall into a gap between their departments and would be addressed in forthcoming legislation.
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He criticised the low level of government funding of refuges for women who have fled domestic violence. "The government is quite happy to celebrate what women's refuges are doing, but the level of funding means that the child care that refuges provide does not meet Ofsted standards. Frankly that is a complete disgrace," he said.

Coombe called on the Home Office and the Department for Education and Skills to "get their act together right now" and address the issue.


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