Tackling the epidemic of violence against women and girls will require the whole system to step up

Tackling the epidemic of violence against women and girls will require the whole system to step up

Violence against women and girls is endemic, systemic and a threat to society on the same scale as terrorism.

More than one million such crimes were reported in just a year – 20 per cent of all recorded crime. One in every 12 women will be a victim of violence. One in every six murders are a result of domestic abuse. A staggering one in 20 people – more than two million of them – will be perpetrators of violence against women and girls in their lives.

In recent weeks we’ve seen numerous examples of men who have targeted women in the most horrific ways. These are not isolated cases and they continue to give us ever more grave cause for concern.

We must act to change the unacceptable reality for women and girls. Policing will play its part, but the scale and urgency of the challenge calls for a whole society response.

A report released today by the National Police Chiefs’ Council and the College of Policing sets out the current situation, the path we are taking and what urgently needs to happen next.

The same four Ps that are used so effectively in counter terrorism now guide our approach - protect individuals, relentlessly pursue perpetrators, prevent people from committing violence against women and girls, and prepare policing to effectively respond.

We’re overhauling the training given to officers across the country and we’re committed to drastically improving the experience of victims which is so often a barrier to reporting.

We’re working at pace to understand the worrying behaviours that drive violence against women and girls, identifying where intervention can put a stop to future escalation.

We’re transforming the way we investigate rape, resulting in a 25 per cent increase in arrests and a 38 per cent increase in charges nationally.

There are new approaches being rolled out across the country that give us great hope for what is possible. In London, the early results from the Met’s data-led targeting of the 100 most harmful offenders suggests we’re already seeing more dangerous men brought to justice and put behind bars. Their use of live facial recognition is also proving effective at identifying and scrutinising the actions of sex offenders who are in the community and who might otherwise have been able to hide their offending in plain sight.

But despite this progress, we’re not complacent. It’s the fourth P - preparing – which now stands between continued success and the unacceptable alternative.

This means specially trained investigators, better technology to detect and investigate offences, and victim support embedded in every case. It means a centralised policing hub to bring these capabilities together and drive improvements at a national level.

Crucially, it means working together and putting the right resources in place to deliver a safer society for women and girls.

Policing has and will continue to step up to meet the challenge, but we can’t just arrest our way out of the crisis. We need other parts of the system to step up too.

Offending is becoming ever more complex and we need a criminal justice system, already bursting at the seams where it isn’t broken, that is equipped to deal with that.

We need social services and healthcare providers to be set up to spot early warning signs of abuse, embedding a preventative approach where perpetrators are most likely to engage with mental health and substance abuse services.

We need education partners to teach children about healthy relationships as part of a nationally mandated curriculum.

We need to technology companies to come to the table, recognising their responsibility to introduce more robust safeguarding measures to stop abusers harming victims online.

We welcome the Government’s commitment to halving rates of violence against women and girls over the coming decade but it is not a goal policing alone can meet. We urge them to seize the opportunity to lead a new and ambitious approach where the whole-system contributes to making it a reality.

A version of this article was first published in The Times on Tuesday, 23 July in my name and that of Deputy Chief Constable Maggie Blyth (Deputy Chief Executive of the College of Policing).

You got the NHS to murder Ben O'Shea baby then used the police to make him psychotic then put him and his wife in prison and murdered them. Don't pretend you care about women or babies I know enough of you , I see what you say and how you act.

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You encourage hate crime to mothers and their families, you encourage the community to act out pre meditated attacks to both mothers and children, you encourage community to poison innocent people  your officers poison and attack innocent single unit families, your officers attack the child, your officers watch children so they can attack when they are older ,your NHS work pre meditation to control victims so they can attack with trials of poisons and illegal drugs your schools are encouraged to attack a child related so you can murder the family in front of the child whilst grooming the child to trust the people hurting them including school councillors that hate the family want to help abuse their privacy and cause problems and get the child and the parent beaten up and poisoned them you get the mother raped traumatized the child and threaten to rape the child them you get people to murder the dad then you murder a toddler using extreme chemical warfare from the NHS then the police blame the parent lie and then to get the community to help try make a child suicidal you gaslight the child into adulthood whilst they are tortured by a community that have nothing but nazi blood which you allow and enable. Any child any age, any man any woman any age and disability any health condition you don't care you will bully and bully and bully the family then after decades of your devastation on social education emotional psychological you will continue your ridiculous narrative and expectations that the family that haven't been free need to before hurt by you and your lies corruption and extremism. Your military that have abused someone their entire lives leaving them starving expects them to kill themselves for them because they enjoy having power over the victims and their families and they enjoy watching the community hurt whoever they are told too. Good luck with your absolute sarcasm right now - - you don't care what happens to anyone as long as you can blame them slander them make them look bad hurt them for being hurt and blame them for all the above for being a person and having a family

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Anthony S.

Cannabis Grow Consultant

4mo

You can extradite deez nuts

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