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Runaway children at risk of exploitation says charity

Risk of sexual and criminal exploitation to missing and runaway children too often ignored, says a leading Staffordshire charity.

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Catch22 has launched their 'What's Missing?' campaign to shed light on causes and connections of thousands of children who go missing each year.

The charity, which runs Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire CSE and Missing Service and others across England, says that missing from home incidents, child sexual and criminal exploitation, and County Lines are too often seen as separate – when in fact they are intricately linked.

It is calling for a National Child Exploitation Strategy that would bring together the different forms of exploitation, specifically addressing child criminal exploitation and County Lines, and including Missing.

Kate Wareham, Catch22’s director of young people and families, says professionals, agencies and the public often underestimate the risks to a child when they go missing – and therefore fail to make early interventions.

She said: “It is not enough to just find a child and be relieved they are home.

"If repeat missing incidences are happening, even if just for a few hours, we need to be asking ourselves where these young people are.

"Going missing from home or care is a key indicator of county lines-related child exploitation, but opportunities to intervene are often unrecognised and missed.

“Too often, those in a position of care, including statutory bodies, missed the signs; by the time services like ours are involved, grooming has occurred over a sustained period and the young person may be deeply involved in criminal activity.”

The charity states that 76,000 children are reported missing every year in the UK, yet many more missing episodes go unreported, meaning children at risk of exploitation are falling through the net.

Recognising the recently published Child Sexual Abuse strategy, Catch22 is calling for a national approach to child exploitation, recognising the crossover between victims of criminal exploitation, sexual exploitation and those going missing.

Statistics from Missing People and from Catch22’s Services show that; one in seven of the children who completed return home interviews had been sexually exploited, one in five children disclosed information about mental health issues and one in 10 had been a victim of criminal exploitation.

Kate Wareham added: “County lines, child criminal exploitation, child sexual exploitation, and children missing from home are too often talked about as separate issues.

"These tags are all symptoms, not causes, and we know from our experience that they are all inextricably linked.

“The focus should be on the vulnerability of young people, building awareness of risks, prioritising resilience, and doing everything we can to safely get them out of such dangerous situations.”

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