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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
UK charities say Blair government contravening childrens
rights
By Harvey Thompson
24 February 2005
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A coalition of the UKs five largest childrens charities
released a report February 1 stating that the British government
is violating internationally agreed standards on childrens
rights.
The report, entitled Room for Improvement, was compiled
by Barnardos, the National Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), Save the Children, the Childrens
Society and the National Childrens Charity (NCH). It illustrates
how the UK falls far short of meeting standards set out in the
United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) due
to conditions such as high rates of child poverty, the jailing
of juveniles, the detention of refugee children, the failure to
outlaw smacking and the prosecution of child prostitutes.
As the title suggests, the report is intended to persuade the
government to mend its ways. Nonetheless, the social picture painted
by the reports findings is a damning indictment of situation
facing millions of young people under British capitalism.
Child poverty
Before its election in 1997, Labour promised to halve child
poverty by 2010. But the report found that one in four children
in England, Wales and Scotland now live in poverty, of which 16
percent endure persistent poverty. This amounts to an estimated
3.6 million children going without basics, such as meals and adequate
clothing.
This must be set against a background in which the income gap
between rich and poor has more than doubled since 1977, and continues
to grow. The most vulnerable children are especially at risk of
povertymore than 55 percent of families with disabled children
experience poverty at some time in their lives, the report states.
It continues, Children from poor families are more likely
to grow up socially excluded, homeless, to have problems with
drugs or alcohol and become victims of crime. Living in a poor
family reduces childrens expectations of their own lives
and leads to a cycle where poverty is passed on from generation
to generation.
Just days after the release of the charities report, the government
released its own figures on levels of child poverty in the counties
of Yorkshire and north Lincolnshire, where the coal, steel and
fishing industries have been decimated over the last two decades.
Given that the figures are officially sanctionedwith all
the attendant tinkering and distortionthey are all the more
devastating. They reveal that in the two regions, three in every
ten children live below the poverty line. In some areas, such
as the Manor estate in Sheffield, some 53 percent of families
live below the poverty line.
Child neglect, abuse and exploitation
As regards Britains record on the protection of children,
the report shows that over the last 30 years, there has been no
improvement in child mortality rates caused by abuse and neglect.
The government is not simply a bystander in this state of affairs.
The report points out that UK law still allows parents to physically
assault their children, as long as they do not cause provable
injury. In changing the ruling on corporal punishment in
schools, for example, the government retained the Victorian-era
law of reasonable chastisement, removing it only in
cases of grievous bodily harm, wounding and ill treatment.
Moreover, some of the children most at risk of neglect and
abuse are under state supervision. The report points out that
children held in detention centres and prisons are subject to
solitary confinement, strip searches and restraint. Since 1990,
29 children have died in custody in England and Wales, and 24
percent report being assaulted while in custody.
At any one time, there are approximately 3,000 young people
under 18 locked up in England and Wales. The majority of these
children show signs of mental health disorders. In 2003-2004,
3,337 children officially recognised as vulnerable entered prison
service custody.
Amongst children in care, 45 percent of those ages 5 to 17
years have mental health disorders. Children from black and minority
ethnic groups are over-represented in the care system: they account
for nearly one in five of those in care, but just one in ten of
the general population.
Children who end up on the streets are at particular risk of
abuse, including prostitution (which can then lead to prosecution),
crime and violence. At least 250 children are known to have been
trafficked into the UK in the last five years.
Child refugees and children of immigrant workers
The plight of child refugees and the children of immigrant
workers are even more chronic. When the UK ratified the UN Convention
in 1991, it entered a wide-ranging reservation on all matters
relating to immigration and nationality, including the treatment
of refugee children. This means that refugee children do not even
benefit from the same minimal levels of protection as other children
in Britaineffectively codifying discrimination in law.
The report shows that children are increasingly being subjected
to accelerated immigration procedures, which offer them insufficient
protection. On June 26, 2004, 60 children were detained in removal
centres under immigration act powers.
Children involved in asylum determination procedures have no
right to access legal representation or an independent advocate
or guardian. Recent legislative changes will result in the complete
withdrawal of support to families at the end of the asylum processleaving
parents at risk of being separated from their children.
Refugee families are discriminated against in terms of the
financial support (they are given less than the nationally established
minimum income) and accommodation they receive. Refugee children
experience significant problems in accessing education, health
and other services.
The standard of care received by unaccompanied children continues
to be subject to chance and is often inadequate. Many receive
only basic services and are not provided with leaving care support
by local authoritiesin contravention of the principles of
the Children Act 1989 (UK law) as well as recent government guidance.
Unaccompanied children continue to be housed in temporary accommodation
government commitments to ending the use of bed and breakfast
accommodation for families with children do not apply to refugees.
Now the government plans to force refugee families to live
in accommodation centres, where children will be segregated and
denied access to mainstream schools.
See Also:
Britain: poverty
and homelessness rise under Labour
[24 December 2004]
UK adolescent
mental ill health rising
[4 November 2004]
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