Archive for October 22nd, 2007

22
Oct
07

C of E child abuse was ignored for decades

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0451.htm

Child abuse has gone unchecked in the Church of England for decades amid a cover up by bishops, secret papers have revealed.
Telegraph TV: Church child abuse ‘unchecked’
Information that could have prevented abuse has been “lost or damaged”, concerns about individuals have been ignored and allegations have not been recorded. It means that the Church has no idea how many paedophiles are in its midst.
Lawyers warned last night that the Church faces a crisis as catastrophic as the one that engulfed the Roman Catholic Church and cost it millions of pounds in damages.
Richard Scorer, a solicitor who has specialised in child abuse cases, said that the Church of England’s mistakes amounted to “an appalling, shocking level of negligence” that is likely to leave it open to claims from victims who have been too afraid to speak out in the past. The Church is to launch an urgent investigation on an unprecedented scale.
It will look at the records of thousands of clergy – including those who have retired – church employees, lay workers and volunteers dating back decades in an attempt to expose those who have previously escaped prosecution and identify those who pose “current risks”.
Dioceses will appoint independent reviewers with access to all of their personnel files. These are due to be examined over an 18-month period.
However, the internal Church documents – leaked to The Sunday Telegraph – show that even if churchwardens, who are lay officials, are found to have previous allegations against them, the Church has no power to suspend them.
Bishops have called for the review following two high-profile cases last spring. One of the documents, compiled by the Church’s Central Safeguarding Liaison Group, concedes that “most serious concerns will have been known by the senior staff at the time”.
The Church has been guilty of systemic failures on a large scale, according to the document. “Some records may have been lost or damaged,” it says, adding that warnings from psychologists might also have been ignored.
The liaison group was asked to draw up a review policy by the House of Bishops, which discussed the plans at its meeting earlier this month.
Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was at the meeting, has backed the need for a comprehensive review following the two child abuse cases.
“Every parish has got to have a child protection policy and it needs to work properly,” he said.
The liaison group is chaired by the Rt Rev Anthony Priddis, the Bishop of Hereford, and includes the Rev Pearl Luxon, the Church’s child protection adviser, as well as other clergy with experience in legal, social and probation work.

22
Oct
07

Parents get lessons to beat internet paedophiles

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0450.htm
PARENTS are being taught how to prevent their children falling victim to online predators, amid rising fears about the prevalence of paedophiles on the internet. A 250-strong team of teachers, police officers and social workers are being sent across Scotland to give lectures and offer one-to-one advice. America’s FBI estimates that 50,000 paedophiles across the world are online at any one time. In Britain, one in 12 children has had a conversation with a stranger online, according to the London School of Economics. Now, experts trained specifically to explain the hidden dangers posed by online predators will be passing on advice to anxious parents. The sessions, being offered free in schools, village halls and youth clubs, will also give explanations on how to access the internet for parents whose technological knowledge has been outpaced by their children’s. The initiative comes after numerous requests from parents asking schools and police officers where they could learn more about the online threats facing their children. The move, which will see 4,700 experts giving advice across the UK, is part of the “ThinkuKnow” campaign run by the Child Exploitation Online Protection Service (CEOP), a Government agency tasked with fighting online paedophiles. Jim Gamble, the chief executive of CEOP, said: “It really is time that we share with parents the types of behavioural changes that could be the early warning signs in their children; that we get our minds around these new terminologies, these ever-emerging opportunities, and instead of facing them with fear, we face them with informed opinion and intelligent understanding.”

22
Oct
07

The Truth Must Out

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0449.htm
There can be no compromises when it comes to protecting children in church. Too often, however, the church has scandalously backed away from the sort of complete transparency that alone is needed in order to restore trust.
Unless the church does everything in its power to keep its children safe it betrays a sacred trust and winds up complicit in the very evil it has pledged to destroy. So why do churches always seem to be getting it wrong?
Partly it’s a fear of the press. Faced with the prospect of headlines linking the church and child abuse, the temptations to batten down the hatches and sort things out “in-house” are overwhelming. But if the Church of England has anything to learn from the scandals that have rocked the Roman church it is that one mustn’t try and confine the scandal of child abuse to the confessional. The truth will out. And, for the protection of future children, the truth must out.
Some years ago I discovered an elderly member of my congregation had once been to prison for abusing children. He couldn’t go to his local church without being recognised. So he travelled miles across town to seek the anonymity of our church where nobody knew anything about him or his past. Was he a very simple old man, who had been punished, and was now seeking forgiveness? If so, then it would be quite wrong for the church to turn him away. Or was he a clever predator, still on the look out for another opportunity? Needless to say, we watched him like a hawk.
He is dead now, and has faced the judgment of his maker. But as a parish priest, with over 500 children currently registered in our Sunday school, I have to make judgments that will protect kids this side of eternity. Which is why today’s church is much hotter on child protection issues than it ever has been. And that means, at some level, I have to treat everybody that comes to my church, and works within it, with the same degree of suspicion. The days of an amateurish ’he seems OK to me’ are now long gone.

22
Oct
07

Need legal advice? Try a website that’s laying down the law on costs

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0448.htm
A new ‘lawyer supermarket’ offers quotes for services from conveyancing to getting a divorce. Sean Coughlan puts it to the test The concept of the price comparison website is being applied to lawyers – casting light on that most difficult of legal questions: “How much will it cost?”
Since many people only use a lawyer infrequently, when they do have to look for legal advice it’s difficult to know what constitutes a fair price and what is a rip-off. And for anyone beginning legal proceedings, there is a worry about the size of the final bill.
But a new website, takelegaladvice.com, is aiming to drag prices into the open. It is offering an online quote for law firms, much in the way financial services websites do for insurance, mortgages or personal loans. It’s a kind of lawyer supermarket.
“Looking for a lawyer is more complicated than using a website to compare car insurance, but the principle is essentially the same,” says Derek Bedlow, its managing editor.
The idea was sparked by the experience of running a divorce advice website, says Mr Bedlow. “That was inundated with queries about looking for a lawyer from people who weren’t sure about where to get objective advice.”
At present the website, offering quotes from a panel of about 300 law firms, claims to be the only one of its kind in Britain.
But Mr Bedlow says it’s a taste of things to come with the forthcoming deregulation of legal services. The government says it wants buying legal services to be as straightforward as “buying a can of beans” – and a regulatory shake-up will allow a much wider range of companies to sell legal services, in a reform that has been dubbed “Tesco law”. As such, Mr Bedlow says that comparison websites, such as takelegaladvice.com, will become part of the market, particularly as more price-aware brands enter the field.
And a little mystery shopping by Guardian Money on takelegaladvice.com website shows how much difference already exists between fees.
The Test
We registered details on the website and then submitted enquiries about particular legal issues. We asked for quotes from lawyers on buying and selling a house, getting divorced and suffering an industrial injury.
The results are not instant, but within 48 hours we received quotes from 14 law firms willing to work for a client based in London.

22
Oct
07

Need legal advice? Try a website that’s laying down the law on costs

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0448.htm
A new ‘lawyer supermarket’ offers quotes for services from conveyancing to getting a divorce. Sean Coughlan puts it to the test The concept of the price comparison website is being applied to lawyers – casting light on that most difficult of legal questions: “How much will it cost?”
Since many people only use a lawyer infrequently, when they do have to look for legal advice it’s difficult to know what constitutes a fair price and what is a rip-off. And for anyone beginning legal proceedings, there is a worry about the size of the final bill.
But a new website, takelegaladvice.com, is aiming to drag prices into the open. It is offering an online quote for law firms, much in the way financial services websites do for insurance, mortgages or personal loans. It’s a kind of lawyer supermarket.
“Looking for a lawyer is more complicated than using a website to compare car insurance, but the principle is essentially the same,” says Derek Bedlow, its managing editor.
The idea was sparked by the experience of running a divorce advice website, says Mr Bedlow. “That was inundated with queries about looking for a lawyer from people who weren’t sure about where to get objective advice.”
At present the website, offering quotes from a panel of about 300 law firms, claims to be the only one of its kind in Britain.
But Mr Bedlow says it’s a taste of things to come with the forthcoming deregulation of legal services. The government says it wants buying legal services to be as straightforward as “buying a can of beans” – and a regulatory shake-up will allow a much wider range of companies to sell legal services, in a reform that has been dubbed “Tesco law”. As such, Mr Bedlow says that comparison websites, such as takelegaladvice.com, will become part of the market, particularly as more price-aware brands enter the field.
And a little mystery shopping by Guardian Money on takelegaladvice.com website shows how much difference already exists between fees.
The Test
We registered details on the website and then submitted enquiries about particular legal issues. We asked for quotes from lawyers on buying and selling a house, getting divorced and suffering an industrial injury.
The results are not instant, but within 48 hours we received quotes from 14 law firms willing to work for a client based in London.

22
Oct
07

Need legal advice? Try a website that’s laying down the law on costs

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0448.htm
A new ‘lawyer supermarket’ offers quotes for services from conveyancing to getting a divorce. Sean Coughlan puts it to the test The concept of the price comparison website is being applied to lawyers – casting light on that most difficult of legal questions: “How much will it cost?”
Since many people only use a lawyer infrequently, when they do have to look for legal advice it’s difficult to know what constitutes a fair price and what is a rip-off. And for anyone beginning legal proceedings, there is a worry about the size of the final bill.
But a new website, takelegaladvice.com, is aiming to drag prices into the open. It is offering an online quote for law firms, much in the way financial services websites do for insurance, mortgages or personal loans. It’s a kind of lawyer supermarket.
“Looking for a lawyer is more complicated than using a website to compare car insurance, but the principle is essentially the same,” says Derek Bedlow, its managing editor.
The idea was sparked by the experience of running a divorce advice website, says Mr Bedlow. “That was inundated with queries about looking for a lawyer from people who weren’t sure about where to get objective advice.”
At present the website, offering quotes from a panel of about 300 law firms, claims to be the only one of its kind in Britain.
But Mr Bedlow says it’s a taste of things to come with the forthcoming deregulation of legal services. The government says it wants buying legal services to be as straightforward as “buying a can of beans” – and a regulatory shake-up will allow a much wider range of companies to sell legal services, in a reform that has been dubbed “Tesco law”. As such, Mr Bedlow says that comparison websites, such as takelegaladvice.com, will become part of the market, particularly as more price-aware brands enter the field.
And a little mystery shopping by Guardian Money on takelegaladvice.com website shows how much difference already exists between fees.
The Test
We registered details on the website and then submitted enquiries about particular legal issues. We asked for quotes from lawyers on buying and selling a house, getting divorced and suffering an industrial injury.
The results are not instant, but within 48 hours we received quotes from 14 law firms willing to work for a client based in London.

22
Oct
07

I saw I was not the only one

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0447.htm
Twelve years ago, two extraordinary women set up an organisation to support mothers whose children have been sexually abused. Julie Bindel hears some of their stories
Jemma Maguire was living happily with her second husband and her two sons and two daughters from a previous marriage. Then, in 1999, “completely out of the blue”, her six-year-old daughter, Mindy, revealed that she had been sexually abused by her stepfather. “And just as we were trying to cope with that, I then discovered that my 11-year-old daughter, Franki, had also been abused by him,” says Maguire.
Finding out what had happened to her daughters was, says Maguire, the worst experience of her life. And it is so much harder, says Maguire, when the abuser is a loved member of the same family. “I threw my partner out as soon as I found out what he had been doing,” says Maguire, “but the police decided to take no action against him.”
Franki laid the blame for the abuse on her mother for failing to protect her and Mindy, and became very overprotective of her younger sister. But worse was to come: “The boys did not believe it had happened so there was quite vicious fighting between the brothers and their sisters.”
Franki began sleeping around and shoplifting. “She was drinking and got in with a really bad crowd,” says Maguire. “She even became violent towards me. I was terrified.”
As a result of the sexual abuse, Franki developed a hatred for her body, and began to self-harm. It became so bad that she began to say she wanted to have sex-change surgery, and would not leave her bedroom for days at a time.
But Maguire was lucky – if you can call it that – she was one of the first mothers to receive support from a group aimed at helping people like her. Social services referred her to Mothers of Sexually Abused Children (Mosac), based in Blackpool.
Through counselling, and just being able to talk to people who understood their plight, the family was able to repair some of the damage.
Then when Franki was 15, she became pregnant. “Franki could not pretend any longer that she didn’t need her mum,” says Maguire, “and I was just waiting for that moment. As it happens, the baby bonded us.”
Now, thanks to Mosac, the family has become close again, says Maguire, and in some ways they have formed an even closer bond than before the abuse.

22
Oct
07

Snatched by Fagin

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0446.htm
The United Nations estimates 1.2m children are trafficked across the world each year. In the final part of a series on 21st Century slavery, Lindsay Jennings looks at the victims who disappeared from care in Newcastle – and the trend for trafficking British children.
THEY had applied for asylum the moment they landed at Newcastle Airport, clutching their fake Japanese passports. The three schoolgirls – Mei Fang Weng, 15, Xiu Ming Lin and Yun Jen He, both 16, – were put into the care of social services in Newcastle. Three days later they disappeared and were never heard of again.
Since that case in March 2005, other Chinese girls have arrived at the airport, and vanished in similar circumstances. But rather than running away of their own volition, it is likely they were lured into a life of prostitution – one of the 1.2 million victims of child trafficking across the world.
According to the UK Human Trafficking Centre, in Sheffield, children as young as five from Africa, Asia and eastern Europe are being forced into sexual slavery and pornography or made to beg and steal. They can be found in illegal sweatshops, restaurants and in the food processing industry.
Abandoned children are particularly vulnerable. They often lack education and proper documentation and almost always have no means of support. But many are duped, taken away from their parents by 21st Century Fagins who demand up to £3,000 to give their children better prospects in Britain. The parents believe that their children will be able to send money back home when they start work. But they never hear from them again.
Identifying trafficked children in Britain is one of the key challenges authorities face.
NSPCC director and chief executive, Dame Mary Marsh, says: “These children are incredibly vulnerable; they might be regularly beaten, raped, denied food and basic comforts and have no access to healthcare or an education. Trafficked children are afraid to ask for help for fear of retaliation from their trafficker or being treated as criminals by the UK authorities.”
Child trafficking first became an issue in 1995 when social workers in West Sussex found a child had gone missing from care. It soon emerged there was a pattern with young girls from Nigeria being taken to Europe to be used for sex.
Since then, it has been difficult to assess the real scale of the problem. In 2005, a study by the charity Barnardo’s found that 12 out of 32 local authorities were aware of cases of young people from abroad who had been sexually exploited. Even though the first sweep of the joint police initiative, Operation Pentameter, was focused on women during brothel raids across the country, at least 12 girls under the age of 18 were rescued, including one 14-year-old.
In the North-East, a report published in March into child trafficking in Newcastle found 16 children were likely to have been trafficked to the region. Of the 16, seven Somali girls, suspected of being brought to the UK for under-age forced marriages, went missing along with six Chinese youngsters, including the three mentioned above.
The research was carried out on behalf of Save The Children and ECPAT UK, a coalition of nine charities, to gauge the scale of the problem outside London. It highlighted a lack of safe accommodation for young people who have been trafficked, and specially trained foster carers to deal with victims. Across the country, it found 80 children had been trafficked and 48 had gone missing from local authority care.
Catherine Fitt, executive director of children’s services for Newcastle City Council, says they work closely with Barnardo’s and the Children’s Society to provide outreach support.
Wendy Shepherd, who runs the Barnardo’s Secos project (Sexually Exploited Children on the Streets), in Middlesbrough and is a member of the UK Human Trafficking Centre group, says it’s difficult to stop young people disappearing. “If a young person has been brought from abroad to this country they may be groomed to seek asylum once they reach an airport,” she says. “They’ll tell them ‘we’ll come and collect you and give you a far better life’ but what they don’t realise is that they’ve been tricked. They will appear when people least expect it, send a text message, saying ‘meet me around the corner’ and that young person will disappear into an abyss.”

22
Oct
07

The woman who won’t be allowed to keep her baby – just in case she harms it

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0445.htm
A mother-to-be faces losing her baby within minutes of its birth because social workers fear she will harm the child.
Fran Lyon, 22, has been told she cannot be trusted with a newborn because she is likely to suffer from Munchausen’s syndrome by proxy.
The condition is said to lead mothers to seek attention by harming their child or claiming it is ill.
Miss Lyon insisted yesterday that the mental health problems she had as a teenager were behind her. She also appealed for a place in a mother and baby unit so that she could look after her child under supervision.
“I would be happy to stay for as long as it takes,” she said. “At the end of the day I have nothing to hide so why would I have a problem going? I know there is nothing wrong.
“I’m not depressed, although I have every right to be. I’m not struggling to cope.”
Miss Lyon’s child – a girl to be called Molly – is due in January.
“I know I wouldn’t hurt her,” she said. “I would quite happily have 24-hour supervision with a perfect stranger sat with me watching my every move.
“All I want is a chance to be Molly’s mum.”
Social workers told Miss Lyon last week that her child will be taken from her within 30 minutes of birth.
Munchausen’s has been at the heart of a series of miscarriages of justice.
Sir Roy Meadow, a discredited paediatrician who helped develop theories about the condition, was responsible for evidence that led to the wrongful convictions of Angela Cannings and Sally Clark for murdering their children. Miss Clark died earlier this year, after, friends said, turning to alcohol following her release from prison

22
Oct
07

The woman who won’t be allowed to keep her baby – just in case she harms it

Full Story:
http://www.stopinjusticenow.com/News_0445.htm
A mother-to-be faces losing her baby within minutes of its birth because social workers fear she will harm the child.
Fran Lyon, 22, has been told she cannot be trusted with a newborn because she is likely to suffer from Munchausen’s syndrome by proxy.
The condition is said to lead mothers to seek attention by harming their child or claiming it is ill.
Miss Lyon insisted yesterday that the mental health problems she had as a teenager were behind her. She also appealed for a place in a mother and baby unit so that she could look after her child under supervision.
“I would be happy to stay for as long as it takes,” she said. “At the end of the day I have nothing to hide so why would I have a problem going? I know there is nothing wrong.
“I’m not depressed, although I have every right to be. I’m not struggling to cope.”
Miss Lyon’s child – a girl to be called Molly – is due in January.
“I know I wouldn’t hurt her,” she said. “I would quite happily have 24-hour supervision with a perfect stranger sat with me watching my every move.
“All I want is a chance to be Molly’s mum.”
Social workers told Miss Lyon last week that her child will be taken from her within 30 minutes of birth.
Munchausen’s has been at the heart of a series of miscarriages of justice.
Sir Roy Meadow, a discredited paediatrician who helped develop theories about the condition, was responsible for evidence that led to the wrongful convictions of Angela Cannings and Sally Clark for murdering their children. Miss Clark died earlier this year, after, friends said, turning to alcohol following her release from prison




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