Guernsey Press

Charities condemn ‘shocking’ child strip searches by Met Police

The data from Scotland Yard showed 58% of the children searched were black, and more than 95% were boys.

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Charities have condemned the “shocking” number of children who have been strip searched by the Metropolitan Police without an appropriate adult present.

The overwhelming response to what they describe as the forces’s “appalling” actions comes after data obtained from Scotland Yard by the Children’s Commissioner showed some 650 children aged 10 to 17 were strip-searched by Met officers between 2018 and 2020.

Children’s Commissioner Dame Rachel de Souza sought out the figures after the Child Q scandal came to light in March, in which a 15-year-old schoolgirl who was on her period was strip-searched by police in 2020 after being wrongly suspected of carrying cannabis at school.

People demonstrate outside Stoke Newington Police Station in London, over the treatment of a black 15-year-old schoolgirl who was strip-searched by police while on her period
People demonstrate outside Stoke Newington Police Station in London over the treatment of a black 15-year-old schoolgirl who was strip-searched by police while on her period (Alamy/PA)

“Strip searches are intrusive and traumatic, and children are being completely failed if even basic safeguards are not in place.”

The data from Scotland Yard showed that of the children, 58% were described by the officer as being black, and more than 95% were boys.

The TCS said it is “concerned” by the over-representation of black children in these strip search figures, which only adds to the fears prompted by race and children being treated as adults being identified as issues the Child Q case.

On March 20 2022 hundreds of protesters attend a rally in front of Hackney Town Hall, London, United Kingdom, to demonstrate their support of Child Q
Hundreds of protesters attended a rally in March in front of London’s Hackney Town Hall to demonstrate their support of Child Q (Alamy/PA)

Runnymede Trust chief executive Dr Halima Begum described the findings as “appalling”, adding it “just underlines how badly our children are being failed by the state institutions there to protect them”.

Such “traumatic” encounters with the police where children are criminalised or treated as adults would have an “unforgivable” impact on their psychological wellbeing, according to Dr Begum.

She said: “These experiences form the main lens through which children view the police, and often their teachers too when these searches happen at school. It’s the start of the breakdown of trust in the people and institutions supposedly there to protect them and keep them safe.

City police officers on the beat on Bethnal Green Road, London, England, UK
In almost a quarter (23%) of cases, strip-searches took place without an ‘appropriate adult’ present (Alamy/PA)

“Criminalisation and adultification is traumatic, not inspiring. Our children need to be supported to believe they can achieve anything they want to in this life. We know their experiences couldn’t be further from this.”

A spokesman for London mayor Sadiq Khan  said: “It is deeply concerning that there are so many cases of children being strip searched by the Met without an appropriate adult present, and there remain serious wider issues with regard to disproportionality and the use of stop and search on young black boys.

“This must change and Sadiq has been absolutely clear with the incoming Metropolitan Police Commissioner about the scale of improvement needed across the force so that every Londoner can feel both protected and served.

UK police officers - file photo
Charities condemned the ‘shocking’ number of children strip searched by the Metropolitan Police without an appropriate adult present (Alamy/PA)

The number of strip-searches on children increased each year, with 18% carried out in 2018, 36% in 2019 and 46% in 2020, the figures obtained by the Children’s Commissioner show.

In almost a quarter (23%) of cases, strip-searches took place without an “appropriate adult” confirmed to have been present.

This is required by law, except in cases of “urgency”, and usually is a parent or guardian, but can also be a social worker, carer or a volunteer.

Two thirds of these (70%) involved black boys.

must commit to try to make it happen.

“Otherwise, these things are going to fester.

“As a parent, can you imagine how you would feel if it was your child? Can you just imagine? So this must improve, and I’m not going to stop until it does.”

A spokeswoman for the Independent Scrutiny and Oversight Board, a panel providing external scrutiny of the national police race action plan, said: “The overrepresentation of black children in these figures demonstrates that the harrowing instances revealed by the Child Q incident are not an anomaly but part of broader systemic issues within the Metropolitan Police.”

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