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Labour would make spiking a specific offence, says Starmer

The Opposition leader also announced that the national curriculum would include teaching boys about respecting women.

Nina Lloyd
Tuesday 25 April 2023 11:37 BST
(L to R) Reality TV star Georgia Harrison, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, actress Emily Atack, and shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper ahead of a roundtable discussion on tackling violence against women and girls (Aaron Chown/PA)
(L to R) Reality TV star Georgia Harrison, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, actress Emily Atack, and shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper ahead of a roundtable discussion on tackling violence against women and girls (Aaron Chown/PA) (PA Wire)

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Labour would make spiking a specific offence, Sir Keir Starmer has said, following cross-party support and calls from campaigners to toughen the law on violence against women and girls.

The Opposition leaderĀ criticised the Government for refusing to create a new law, which he argued would make it easier to prosecute perpetrators and help victims come forward.

The pledge came as the party seeks to ramp up its wider commitments to tackling violence against women and girls (VAWG), with Sir Keir also announcing that the national curriculum would include teaching boys about respecting women.

Appearing on ITVā€™s This Morning, he said: ā€œDrinks are spiked, usually of young women out and about, and the spiking of the drink has an effect on them and is often a step towards sexual assault of some sort.

ā€œAnd that has never been a specific offence, so what Iā€™m saying today is an incoming Labour government would make it a specific offence.

ā€œThat would make it easier for people to come forward and report whatā€™s happened and easier to prosecute but also raise awareness of whatā€™s going on.ā€

The Labour leaderā€™s pledge came after he attended a roundtable discussion at the St Giles Trust in Camberwell, south London, with industry experts and campaigners against VAWG, including reality TV star Georgia Harrison and actress Emily Atack.

Spiking is currently covered by several different areas of legislation but there is no single dedicated offence under which to prosecute perpetrators.

The rise of spiking sends terror through the heart of every parent with a daughter, and leaves young women feeling vulnerable

Sir Keir Starmer

Nearly 5,000 cases of needle and drink spiking incidents were reported to police in England and Wales in the 12 months to September 2022, according to National Police Chiefsā€™ Council (NPCC) figures.

Sir Keir said he worries about his own 12-year-old daughter getting older and going out, and knows many other parents are experiencing the same concern.

ā€œThe rise of spiking sends terror through the heart of every parent with a daughter, and leaves young women feeling vulnerable,ā€ he said.

ā€œWomen should not have to live in fear that, when they go out, their drink may be spiked, or that they may be injected with a harmful substance. It is a pernicious, dangerous and hateful crime, and Labour will punish it as such.ā€

He added: ā€œWith Labour, those who abuse women, verbally, physically, virtually, will feel the full force of the justice system.ā€Ā 

The Government said in January that it believes a new law to recognise spiking is ā€œunnecessaryā€,Ā despite the Home Affairs Committee advocating for the creation of a specific offence.

The committee had heard from NPCC drugs lead Jason Harwin, who said the ā€œideal askā€ would be for a specific offence to be created for spiking.

Among those urging ministers to target spiking directly is Conservative MP Richard Graham, who has called for a ā€œnamed legal offenceā€.

Dawn Dines, chief executive of campaign group Stamp Out Spiking, which has advocated for a change in the law over two decades, said: ā€œWe eagerly welcome Labourā€™s commitment to ensure that this crime, which is all but invisible in crime statistics due to under-reporting, is appropriately identified in law and prosecuted.ā€

Sir Keir also announced that a Labour government would make teaching respect for women and girls part of the national curriculum.

Asked on This Morning about the proposal, he said: ā€œI do think we need to do more at school with boys and young men, because this canā€™t be left to women and girls and victims of abuse and harassment to do the heavy lifting. Itā€™s got to be a boys and young men issue as well.ā€

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