‘Police log more than 10,000 online child sex crimes in a year for first time’

3 September 2020, 14:04

Child using a smartphone
Police log over 10,000 cyber child sex crimes in a year for first time – NSPCC. Picture: PA

Records of online offences are up 16% on the previous year, data obtained by the NSPCC charity suggests.

Online child sex crimes logged by police in a year have passed 10,000 for the first time, according to figures obtained by the NSPCC.

Under freedom of information requests, the charity found that 10,391 cyber-related offences were recorded by all forces across England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands between April 1 2019 and March 31 2020 – a 16% increase on the previous year.

It is feared the number could be even greater now as the data relates to before lockdown, a period which saw Childline counselling sessions about grooming on the web go up.

This brings the total number of recorded offences in the five years since it became mandatory to record whether a crime involved the internet to more than 37,000.

The charity is demanding the Government make Online Harms legislation, designed to better protect vulnerable people, a priority this autumn.

“These figures suggest that online abuse was already rising before lockdown, and the risks to children appear to have spiked significantly since,” said Andy Burrows, NSPCC head of child safety online policy.

“It is now almost 17 months since the Government’s original proposals for social media regulation were published and children continue to face preventable harm online.

“At the Hidden Harms Summit, the Prime Minister signalled he was determined to act.

“That’s why he needs to prioritise making progress on a comprehensive Online Harms Bill this autumn, and pass legislation by the end of 2021, that sees tech firms held criminally and financially accountable if they put children at risk.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Will Guyatt questions who is responsible for the safety of children online

Are Zuckerberg and Musk responsible for looking after my kids online?

Social media apps on a phone

U16s social media ban punishes children for tech firm failures, charities say

Google shown on a smartphone

US Government proposes forcing Google to sell Chrome to break-up tech empire

The logo for Google's Gemini AI assistant

Google’s Gemini AI gets dedicated iPhone app in the UK for the first time

Facebook stock

EU fines Meta £660m for competition rule breaches over Facebook Marketplace

A phone taking a photo of a phone mast

Government pledges more digital inclusion as rural Wales gets phone mast boost

Social media apps displayed on a mobile phone screen

What is Bluesky and why are people leaving X to sign up?

Someone types at a keyboard

Cyber security chief warns Black Friday shoppers to be alert to scams

MPs

Ministers pressed on excluding Chinese firms from UK’s genomics sector

Child with mobile phone stock

Specially designed smartphone for children launches in the UK

Roblox on a laptop

Children’s gaming platform Roblox makes ‘major update’ to parental controls

An offshore wind farm

Government launches competition to find AI solutions to boost UK clean energy

A Google logo on the screen of a mobile phone

Google partnership with Anthropic AI cleared by competition watchdog

Concept images showing the entrance to the Minecraft-themed park

Minecraft to become UK real-life destination in deal with Merlin

A man looking at the home page of social media site Instagram on a smartphone

Instagram testing user ability to reset content recommendations

Hand with IPhone with the Bluesky app

Starmer not joining the Bluesky social media platform ‘at the moment’