NSPCC: Thousands of child abuse crimes every month Online Safety Bill is delayed

28 July 2022, 00:04

Online Safety Bill amendment
Online Safety Bill amendment. Picture: PA

The NSPCC has written to the two Conservative leadership candidates, urging them to pass the Bill without delay once a new prime minister is in place.

More than 3,500 online child abuse crimes will take place every month that the Online Safety Bill is delayed, children’s charity the NSPCC has warned.

The charity said its analysis of Home Office crime data found a more than tenfold increase in online child sexual abuse offences recorded by police in England and Wales over the last decade.

According to that data, 42,503 obscene publication (child abuse image) and sexual grooming crimes were logged over the last year, up from 3,706 a decade ago.

The NSPCC said it has now written to both Conservative leadership candidates to urge them to commit to passing the online safety regulation in full and without delay when they become prime minister.

The charity said delaying the Bill further or “watering down” the proposals would “represent the reversal of an important manifesto commitment that commands strong levels of public support”.

The Online Safety Bill had been due to continue its passage through Parliament last week, but this was postponed until the autumn when either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak take office.

The online safety laws would compel social media and other platforms to protect their users from harmful content, placing a duty of care on them, with large fines and access to their sites being blocked should they breach the new rules.

But the NSPCC said the delay would leave more children at risk of being groomed, and said the sheer scale of the problem must serve as a wake-up call to the next prime minister.

“With every second the clock ticks by on the Online Safety Bill an ever-growing number of children and families face the unimaginable trauma of preventable child abuse,” NSPCC chief executive Sir Peter Wanless said.

“The need for legislation to protect children is clear, commands overwhelming support from MPs and the public and builds on the UK’s global leadership position in tackling harm online.

“Robust regulation can be delivered while protecting freedom of speech and privacy.

“There can be no more important mission for Government than to keep children safe from abuse and the next prime minister must keep the promise made to families in the election manifesto and deliver the Online Safety Bill as a national priority.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

LG AeroCatTower (Martyn Landi/PA)

The weird and wonderful gadgets of CES 2025

Sinclair C5 enthusiasts enjoy the gathering at Alexandra Palace in London

Sinclair C5 fans gather to celebrate ‘iconic’ vehicle’s 40th anniversary

A still from Kemp's AI generated video

Spandau Ballet’s Gary Kemp releases AI generated music video for new single

DragonFire laser weapon system

Britain must learn from Ukraine and use AI for warfare, MPs say

The Pinwheel Watch, a smartwatch designed for children, unveiled at the CES technology show in Las Vegas.

CES 2025: Pinwheel launches child-friendly smartwatch with built in AI chatbot

The firm said the morning data jumps had emerged as part of its broadband network analysis (PA)

Millions head online at 6am, 7am and 8am as alarms go off, data shows

A mobile phone screen

Meta ends fact-checking on Facebook and Instagram in favour of community notes

Mark Zuckerberg

Meta criticised over ‘chilling’ content moderation changes

Apps displayed on smartphone

Swinney voices concern at Meta changes and will ‘keep considering’ use of X

sam altman

Sister of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman files lawsuit against brother alleging sexual abuse as child

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman with then-prime minister Rishi Sunak at the AI Safety Summit in Milton Keynes in November 2023

OpenAI boss Sam Altman denies sister’s allegations of sexual abuse

A super-resolution prostate image

New prostate cancer imaging shows ‘extremely encouraging’ results in trials

Gadget Show

AI will help workers with their jobs, not replace them, tech executives say

Zuckerberg said he will "work with President Trump to push back on governments around the world that are going after American companies and pushing to censor more”.

Meta’s ‘chilling’ decision to ditch fact-checking and loosen moderation could have ‘dire consequences’ says charity

Twitter logo

X boss Linda Yaccarino praises Meta’s decision to scrap fact checkers

People walk by the Las Vegas Convention Centre

Smart home tech, AI and cars among central themes as CES 2025 prepares to open