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Failure to end custody for all children draws criticism from campaigners

Posted: 18 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Government plans for the future of youth justice do not go far enough, campaigners in the sector have warned.

Frances Crook, director of the Howard League for Penal Reform, acknowledged the government had got some things right, but said overall its response to the youth justice consultation, published last week alongside the Children Bill, was "an act of some cowardice".

Crook said she would have liked to have seen the government put an end to the use of custody for all children, building on recent measures to reduce the prison population and to remove 15 and 16-year-old girls from jails.
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However, she welcomed the proposal to treat 17-year-olds on remand or bail as juveniles rather than adult offenders.

Tim Bateman, Nacro's senior policy development officer, agreed, saying the proposal addressed an anomaly that had previously drawn criticism from the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, and would permit 17-year-olds who were refused bail to be remanded to local authority accommodation in the same way as younger children.

The rehabilitation agency also welcomed plans to reduce the use of custody through the introduction of alternative community sentences for young people who offend seriously or persistently.

However, the charity said it had grave concerns about reducing the criteria for 12- to 14-year-old children to be given detention and training orders, a fear echoed around the sector.
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Rob Allen, director of Rethinking Crime and Punishment, said that while it was encouraging that the government had made it clear the courts must take account of the child's welfare when sentencing, making more young people eligible for imprisonment "was not a good thing".

He said he would have liked to have seen the introduction of a mechanism to allow the criminal courts to transfer cases where children had suffered family problems such as abuse to the family court where the child could be dealt with through civil proceedings. This omission amounted to "a missed opportunity", he said.

Youth Justice - the Next Steps: Summary of Responses and the Government's Proposals from  www.homeoffice.gov.uk/docs3/youthjusticeresponse.html


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