| Taxi Driver Online http://www.taxi-driver.co.uk/phpBB2/ |
|
| Oxfordshire CSE report recommends taxi review http://www.taxi-driver.co.uk/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=27328 |
Page 1 of 1 |
| Author: | captain cab [ Thu Jul 23, 2015 3:39 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Oxfordshire CSE report recommends taxi review |
Oxfordshire CSE report recommends taxi regulation review ![]() Guilty members of Oxford sex grooming ring (Top L-R) Mohammed Karrar, Bassam Karrar, Akhtar Dogar, Anjum Dogar, (Bottom) Kamar Jamil, Assad Hussain, Zeesham Ahmed The seven men jailed in 2013 targeted vulnerable girls and plied them with alcohol and drugs A "robust overview" of taxi driver licensing in Oxfordshire is needed, according to a new report into child sexual exploitation in the county. The Oxfordshire Safeguarding Children Board's "stocktake" report shows the progress agencies have made since 2011. In 2013 seven men were jailed for child rape and trafficking as part of the Operation Bullfinch investigation. The report recommended taxi drivers be more strongly vetted because of the number of children in care transported. In March, a serious case review found police and social services made "many errors" and failed to stop the sexual abuse of young girls in Oxfordshire. As many as 373 children may have been targeted for sex in the county in the past 16 years, the report said. The £1.1m Kingfisher unit, set up by Thames Valley Police and Oxfordshire County Council, has been set up to tackle the issue. 'Good progress' The latest report, written by Maggie Blyth, said a new face-to-face vetting procedure for taxi drivers had been introduced since June. Maggie Blyth, independent chair of the Oxfordshire Safeguarding Children Board Maggie Blyth, the report author, said 1,000 children in care were transported in Oxfordshire daily Oxfordshire County Council has changed the rules for hiring drivers for vulnerable people, with a new, higher standard needing to be met. Ms Blyth said: "We need to focus on transportation systems for children. "Oxfordshire has a statutory responsibility for transporting children in care, there are 1,000 transported daily. "Taxi drivers play an important role in keeping an eye on children in the community as well." A joint statement from all Oxfordshire councils said: "Our aim is for every driver and every escort to have completed all the necessary assessments, vetting and safeguarding training as a condition of receiving his or her licence. "This will raise the bar for safeguarding all children and vulnerable adults using transport services." Other recommendations were for strong leadership by chief officers, greater understanding of perpetrator profiles, better support for adults who experienced abuse as children and better engagement within communities. 'Grooming at pub' Agencies were praised for their progress. "The overall conclusion is that there has been good progress in setting up specialist interventions for children at risk of CSE and robust measures used to identify perpetrators and bring them to justice." As of 1 April the different bodies, including councils, police and social services, were working intensively with 70 children and more than 100 potential offenders had been identified. Further issues have been identified during work to solve the issue of CSE, such as self-harm, neglect within families, and female genital mutilation. As well as the convictions secured under Operation Bullfinch, six people were convicted in March in Banbury. A further six "lone offenders" and another group of three offenders have been convicted of offences including on-line grooming and abuse of both boys and girls. The report also said a pub had been closed down in a "large-scale" operation after it emerged the premises was used for dealing drugs and grooming girls. Oxford city local police commander, Superintendent Christian Bunt, said: "There will always be more work to do in this important area. "I would encourage victims of child sexual exploitation to come forward and speak to us. "We will listen to you and support you. It is the courage of victims that helps us to successfully bring offenders to justice." source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-ox ... e-33626566 |
|
| Author: | captain cab [ Thu Jul 23, 2015 3:42 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Oxfordshire CSE report recommends taxi review |
Bullfinch: Authorities praised for tackling child sexual exploitation in the wake of Bullfinch but calls for better taxi regulation AUTHORITIES in Oxfordshire have been praised for their reforms to tackle child sexual exploitation in the wake of the Bullfinch child abuse scandal. Following a serious case review into how seven men – who were jailed for a minimum of 95 years - were allowed to groom, sexually abuse and prostitute six young girls in Oxford, child protection specialist Sophie Humphreys was asked by the Government to oversee a further report of what progress had been made to tackle the issue. This was after the serious case review exposed how authorities – principally the police and Oxfordshire County Council's children's services – ignored warning signs and failed to understand how grooming gangs worked until 2011. The new report, published this morning, says there has been “good progress” in tackling child sexual exploitation but also identifies five key areas for improvement. They include calls for better regulation of taxis transporting children, profiling of people who sexually abuse children, and much improved therapy services for former victims of child sexual exploitation. In her accompanying report published this morning, Ms Humphrey’s said there had been “solid progress made in how child sexual exploitation is understood and responded to in Oxfordshire” and that she had “witnessed no complacency”. But she agreed there was still a need for improvement, particularly with how thousands of children were transported in taxis every day and “are in contact, usually alone, with predominantly adult males”. She added: “This is not vilifying taxi drivers as a profession. It is about having the necessary oversight.” Ms Humphreys also raised concerns about therapy provided for young adults who were victims of child sexual exploitation, which she said was currently “sparse, and often not adequate”, and called for those who carried out the sexual abuse of children to be profiled. She added: “Tackling child sexual exploitation is undoubtedly complex and the clear focus of the OSCB and partners in making sure the local response is robust, is absolutely the right thing to do. “Practitioners across the system must remain alert, anticipating and expecting the ‘unexpected’ in whatever guise child abuse presents itself.” Ms Humphreys’ findings came after the 114-page serious case review exposed how the authorities – principally the police and Oxfordshire County Council's children's services – ignored warning signs and failed to understand how grooming gangs worked until 2011. That report, published in March, also revealed more than 360 Oxfordshire youngsters were suspected to have been abused or in danger of being groomed. Speaking in the House of Commons afterwards, Education Secretary Nicky Morgan announced Ms Humphreys’ appointment and said the new assessment would “gather the evidence on the effect of reforms to front-line practice.” This morning the Oxfordshire Safeguarding Children Board (OSCB) has published its review in full and Ms Humphreys’ own commentary has been released alongside it. Maggie Blyth, chairwoman of OSBC, said: “The partnership in Oxfordshire has moved a long way together to address the problem of child sexual exploitation, identify collective solutions and produce some tangible evidence of impact. “The stocktake report also describes the need to continue to prevent abuse and exploitation and notes there are five areas in particular that require further work. “These include the regulation and use of taxis; a greater understanding of who the perpetrators of CSE are; and the commissioning of services to provide help and therapy for children into adulthood. “Oxfordshire County Council has set a high bar for ensuring the children it is responsible for are transported safely, but maintaining such standards requires robust oversight. “District councils as licensing authorities need to share information about drivers, delegate enforcement powers and require taxi drivers to complete safeguarding training as part of any knowledge test. “Likewise, NHS organisations and adult social care need to work together to make sure that similar approaches to supporting victims of abuse, as those used in the Kingfisher team, are made available to adults who disclose historic abuse. “And above all Thames Valley Police with the support of the partnership needs to continue to investigate and bring the men who commit these crimes to justice.’’ In May 2013 seven men arrested as part of Operation Bullfinch were convicted at the Old Bailey of child sexual offences against young girls in Oxford. The offences dated back to 2006 and the men received sentences totalling 95 years. TVP Superintendent Christian Bunt said: "In recent years there has been a significant amount of progress in the way we prevent, identify, disrupt and investigate child sexual exploitation in Oxfordshire and across the Thames Valley. "As LPA commander for Oxford City and chairman of the OSCB Child Sexual Exploitation sub group, I welcome the findings of the report (opens new window), which recognises the solid progress made by Thames Valley Police and our partners and accept its recommendations. “Child sexual exploitation is and will remain a local and force wide priority. “My officers and staff deliver focused work with schools, business and the wider community to raise awareness of child sexual exploitation. “Our operational policing is based on intelligence about children who may be vulnerable to this form of abuse, suspected perpetrators and potential hot spot locations. “In Oxfordshire, we have a dedicated unit, the Kingfisher team, where police officers, social workers and health and education professionals work together to encourage victims to come forward, provide them with support and identify and prosecute offenders. “This approach has led to us bringing more perpetrators to justice. “There will always be more work to do in this important area and we will continue to work tirelessly to tackle child sexual exploitation in order to safeguard victims and bring the men who commit these crimes to justice. “I would encourage victims of child sexual exploitation to come forward and speak to us. We will listen to you and support you. It is the courage of victims that helps us to successfully bring offenders to justice.” In a joint statement the leaders of Oxford’s four district councils, Oxford City Council and Oxfordshire County Council said they were working to develop a better system for transporting children and young adults around the county. Matthew Barber, John Cotton, Ian Hudspeth, Barry Norton, Bob Price and Barry Wood said their councils were working with the police after transporting young people was highlighted as an important safeguarding issue by the Oxfordshire Safeguarding Children Board’s report into child sexual exploitation. Their statement said: “A working group over seen by OSCB has already been set up to develop a single, county-wide approach for vetting taxi drivers and proprietors and other transport providers, as well as introducing compulsory training for all drivers. “Our aim is for every driver and every escort to have completed all the necessary assessments, vetting and safeguarding training as a condition of receiving his or her licence. “It is important to stress that this approach is not about placing blame on taxi drivers. “However it is vitally important that we have a robust system that reduces the risk of unsafe drivers obtaining licences.” Barnardo's chief executive Javed Khan said: "No child should ever suffer this horrific abuse. So many important lessons have been learned across the UK, and this momentum must continue. There is no room for complacency as perpetrators continue to be prosecuted for sexually exploiting children. "Everything possible must be done to protect children from manipulative sexual predators, to stop this crime happening in the first place. But if a child does become prey to sexual exploitation, having the right specialist support in place can stop abuse sooner.” source: http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/134948 ... egulation/ |
|
| Author: | Sussex [ Thu Jul 23, 2015 6:51 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Oxfordshire CSE report recommends taxi review |
Lots of talk, albeit well meaning, but are they really saying the answer to this massive problem is more training for drivers? The answer is proper enforcement and zero tolerance. |
|
| Author: | Midlife martyr [ Thu Jul 23, 2015 11:15 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Oxfordshire CSE report recommends taxi review |
The main reason these perverts in Oxford Rotherham and elsewhere went unchecked for so long is the massive moral cowardice displayed by the people who should have been looking out for these kids, they were so scared of having the race card played against them and the possible damage that an accusation of racism even if unproven would do to there careers that they chose to look the other way. |
|
| Author: | Nidge2 [ Fri Jul 24, 2015 4:46 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Oxfordshire CSE report recommends taxi review |
Midlife martyr wrote: The main reason these perverts in Oxford Rotherham and elsewhere went unchecked for so long is the massive moral cowardice displayed by the people who should have been looking out for these kids, they were so scared of having the race card played against them and the possible damage that an accusation of racism even if unproven would do to there careers that they chose to look the other way.
|
|
| Page 1 of 1 | All times are UTC [ DST ] |
| Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group http://www.phpbb.com/ |
|