1,500 To Be Released Early As Prison Crisis Bites
Between 1,500 and 1,800 non-dangerous offenders are to be released from prison next week, 18 days before the end of their sentence, in an effort to ease the prison crisis.
Read MoreBetween 1,500 and 1,800 non-dangerous offenders are to be released from prison next week, 18 days before the end of their sentence, in an effort to ease the prison crisis.
Read MoreAbortions in England and Wales jumped by almost 4% last year, according to figures certain to fuel the growing debate about abortion rights in Britain.
Read MoreDoctors’ leaders yesterday warned of a huge “unspoken epidemic” of domestic abuse. A report from the British Medical Association calls for doctors to be trained to spot and help victims.
Read MoreA programme to vaccinate pre-teenage girls against cervical cancer is expected to move a significant step closer today, despite concern that it could be seen as condoning under-age sex.
Read MoreThe Human Rights Act does not apply to private care homes in England and Wales, the Law Lords have ruled. The decision came in the case of an 84-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s, known only as Mrs YL.
{mosimage}Her lawyers argued that her threatened eviction from a private home would violate her right to family life. Her care was council funded.
Her appeal was rejected by a 3-2 majority. The decision could affect as many as 300,000 care home residents.
Charities Help the Aged and Age Concern said they were disappointed by the ruling, which they said opened elderly people to abuse, neglect and eviction.
They urged the government to get around the Law Lords decision by changing the law to give private care home residents the same rights as those in local authority homes.
The government, which backed Mrs YL’s case, has said previously that it will consult the public before it changes the legislation.
Mrs YL would have protection under human rights law if she were in a home run by a local authority.
Read MoreMany complaints from children being abused at Kerelaw were written off as lies, it was admitted yesterday. Glasgow City Council last week said it believed a hard core of around 40 members of staff at the school had physically or sexually abused children in their care.
{mosimage}Yesterday it admitted that many of the victims had reported their experiences to social workers or other professionals but had been ignored.
Glasgow ran the residential unit in Stevenston, Ayrshire, until it was shut amid a police and council abuse investigation early last year. Twenty workers have been reported to the procurator-fiscal on abuse and other charges.
David Comley, the authority’s head of social work, yesterday told councillors there had been a failure of management at the school and in the council itself and that worrying reports from children had not been heeded.
Mr Comley said: “It is clear in retrospect that a number of children had made complaints about their treatment in Kerelaw. These complaints, for whatever reason, have not been taken appropriately seriously enough.
“What tended to happen was that complaints have been written off as being likely to be untrue without any proper investigation having been carried out. We need to be extremely careful about not doing that.”
He added: “Nobody seems to have looked at the overall picture and said there seems to be a systematic problem here’.”
Councils routinely receive complaints from unhappy children in care, many of which turn out to be untrue or malicious. However, Mr Comley said, should not mean that they are not investigated.
Mr Comley, who will retire this year, was speaking at a meeting of one of the new committees set up by the council to develop and scrutinise policy after the controversial introduction of cabinet-style government last year.
Read MoreAT LEAST half the people in Scotland suspected of having been part of a massive international paedophile ring that traded child-abuse images on the internet will not be prosecuted, The Scotsman understands.
Read MoreThe Minister of Health and Social Services in Wales has said she will press the UK government to implement a full 2.5% pay award for all nurses. Director of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), Tina Donnelly, appreciated the news saying:
Read MoreThe number of people in Scotland diagnosed with alcoholic liver disease has doubled in a decade. Information released to the Scots Tories in response to a parliamentary question, showed figures in some areas had trebled and even quadrupled.
Read MoreAs many as 1.3 million children in the UK are living in severe poverty, according to a report. Research found that around one in 10 children are in families on
Read More