Top Conservative calls for Europe-wide missing children alert
Posted, March 07, 2008 @ 00:00
Top Conservative calls for Europe-wide missing children alert
McMillan-Scott MEP calls for review of law relating to child abduction across EU
Brussels, March 7th -- MEP Edward McMillan-Scott, Vice President of the European Parliament, has called for a Europe-wide network to improve the search for children who go missing anywhere in Europe.
Mr McMillan-Scott is working with the campaign group Parents and Abducted Children Together (PACT) to establish a UK national resource centre. According to PACT's research on average one child goes missing every five minutes in this country. Mr McMillan-Scott told a London press conference yesterday (Thursday) that his campaign to bring back an abducted child from Spain* inspired plans to establish a 24-hour helpline for children abducted in the UK and also to create a Europe-wide missing children network.
Britain’s senior MEP said:
"Sadly, because of the cases of Shannon Matthews from Dewsbury and Madeleine McCann, the issue of missing children is very much in the news. Unfortunately, according to the Children's Society, some 130,000 children go missing in each year in the UK - one every five minutes - for a variety of reasons, and although most are recovered, too many are not. This UK hotline should be part of a Europe-wide network, which is desperately needed."
Only four European countries (Belgium, Denmark, France and Portugal) have a US-style missing children bureau. On Tuesday, March 4th, the European Commission told a Brussels European Children Forum meeting that a 116000 number had been established for child alert cases, but the take-up had been poor.
PACT Chairman Lady Meyer - whose two sons were illegally retained by their father, her first husband, in Germany - said: "PACT believes that a UK National Resource Centre will force central government, the police and the voluntary sector to work on a united front." She outlined a US-style child alert system at the UK National Police College on Wednesday with Caroline Humer - Program Manager of the Washington-based 'Amber Alert' hotline; 97 per cent of missing children each year are recovered by the US system, some 400 each year.
Mr McMillan-Scott, a father and grandfather, who has been campaigning for years for higher standards in child cases across Europe, said: "Each case of child abduction, whether by parents or others is a tragedy. Some are made worse by the way they are handled by countries, courts or public agencies. We also need to look at the principles of child law across Europe. The Conservative Government brought in the Children Act in 1989. This provided for independent legal representation for children among other measures, which are barely known elsewhere in the EU, let alone internationally."