NewsBeat
Online safety group urges Starmer to intervene over child sexual abuse imagery
Sir Keir Starmer must intervene and strengthen incoming online safety rules after a record amount of child sexual abuse material was found on the internet in 2024, a leading online safety organisation has said.
The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), which proactively searches for and helps remove child sexual abuse imagery from the internet, has written to the Prime Minister warning that without his input, platforms will have a “blatant get-out clause” to evade compliance with parts of the Online Safety Act, which is due to begin coming into force this year.
The IWF said the wording of codes of practice within the Act allows firms to remove illegal content only when it is “technically feasible”, and warns that this will incentivise platforms to avoid finding ways to remove illegal content in order to evade compliance.
The charity said Sir Keir was in a unique position to intervene because it was the Prime Minster, when previously head of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), who had first authorised the IWF to start proactively hunting down abuse imagery on the internet.
Writing to the Prime Minister, IWF chairwoman Catherine Brown said: “We are deeply concerned that the codes allow services to remove illegal content only when it is ‘technically feasible’, which will incentivise platforms to avoid finding ways to remove illegal content in order to evade compliance.
“This undermines the Act’s effectiveness in combatting online child sexual abuse. We urge you to instruct Ofcom to urgently review and mitigate this blatant get-out clause.
“The publication of the codes also highlighted the weaknesses within the legislation itself.
“For example, the Act does not mandate companies to moderate content uploaded in private communications. As a result, illegal content that is blocked elsewhere on the internet can still be freely shared in private online spaces.
“We call on your Government to remove the safe harbour inadvertently offered to platforms – including those that facilitate the sharing of child sexual abuse material – by the Act.
“Additional legislation should be introduced to ensure there are no safe havens for criminals in private communications.”
In response, a spokesperson for online safety regulator Ofcom said: “The law says that measures in our codes of practice must be technically feasible.
“However, we expect the vast majority of platforms will be able to take content down and we will hold them to account if they don’t.
“There’ll be measures all platforms will need to take to protect children, such as reviewing child sexual abuse material when they become aware of it and reporting it to law enforcement.”
The IWF said that in 2024, the charity acted to remove images or videos of children suffering sexual abuse, or links to such content, from more than 291,000 webpages.
It said this was the highest number of such webpages it had discovered in its history.
Derek Ray-Hill, interim chief executive of the IWF said: “Ten years ago Keir Starmer, as director of public prosecutions, took a stand, giving the IWF unprecedented powers to proactively hunt down child sexual abuse imagery online.
“Now we need him to act decisively again. The new regulations we’ve all worked so hard to bring in threaten to leave gaping loopholes for criminals to exploit.
“The Online Safety Act can be revolutionary in protecting our children if the political and regulatory will is there. Or it can be a monument to ineffectiveness in the face of a solvable problem.
“The solutions are here, now. They aren’t pie-in-the-sky solutions for the future. They exist, and they are trusted. Big tech just needs to be instructed to switch them on.
“Sir Keir has it in his gift to take the wheel and make a real difference that children in the UK, and all around the world, will benefit from. It’s their safety that is at stake.”
A Government spokesperson said: “Child sexual exploitation and abuse is despicable and has a devastating impact on victims.
“UK law is clear – child sexual abuse is illegal and social media is no exception. Companies must ensure criminal activity cannot proliferate on their sites.
“From March, under the Online Safety Act, companies will need to take robust action to tackle this material when they become aware of it, training moderating teams to spot child exploitation, and testing whether their algorithms are promoting this material – putting safety by design into their products from the outset.
“If companies fail to act, Ofcom has robust enforcement powers including the ability to issue significant fines.
“This Government is committed to using all available levers, such as the Online Safety Act, to ensure children are protected online, and we will not hesitate to go further if necessary.”
NewsBeat
Starmer promises action to end ‘shockingly easy’ access to knives online
Online retailers will be forced to put in place tougher checks to stop youngsters buying knives after Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said it is “shockingly easy” for children to buy blades.
Southport murderer Axel Rudakubana used a knife bought from Amazon to kill three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, Merseyside, in July.
The Government has promised new laws, which could see retailers forced to ask anyone buying a knife for two types of identification.
Buyers could be asked to submit an official identity document, such as a passport or driving licence, and also record a live video to prove their age, the BBC reported.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper told MPs it is a “a total disgrace” that Rudakubana, then 17 and with a history of violence, was able to buy a weapon online and promised new measures in the Crime and Policing Bill this spring.
Writing in The Sun, Sir Keir said: “It remains shockingly easy for our children to get their hands on deadly knives. The lessons of this case could not be clearer.
“Time and again, as a child, the Southport murderer carried knives. Time and again, he showed clear intent to use them.
“And yet, tragically, he was still able to order the murder weapon off of the internet without any checks or barriers. A two-click killer. This cannot continue.
“The technology is there to set up age verification checks, even for kitchen knives ordered online.
“We must now use it to protect our children from future attack and I will ensure that this happens.”
The need for action on knife crime has been further illustrated after a 12-year-old boy was stabbed to death in Birmingham on Tuesday.
A 14-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder after the youngster was found with serious injuries near Scribers Lane in Hall Green shortly after 3pm on Tuesday.
Commander Stephen Clayman, of the National Police Chiefs’ Council, is leading a review of online knife sales and had been due to report at the end of this month, but the plans are now being brought forward, the BBC said.
The forthcoming Crime and Policing Bill is also set to introduce new sanctions for senior tech executives whose companies fail to operate within the law on knife sales.
The current law states that retailers must verify the age of the customer before selling a knife and, for those bought online, at the point of collection or delivery.
An Amazon spokesman said: “We take our responsibility around the sale of all age-restricted items – including bladed products – extremely seriously and have launched an urgent investigation in relation to this tragic case.
“We use trusted ID verification services to check name, date of birth and address details whenever an order is placed for these bladed items.
“We have an age verification on delivery process that requires drivers to verify the recipient’s age through an app on their devices before handing over a parcel containing an age-restricted item.”
NewsBeat
Call for Oxevision cameras to be banned in mental health patients’ bedrooms
CCTV and cameras are not uncommon on mental health wards, used with the intention of keeping patients safe. But some say that new technology, where cameras also monitor their pulse and breathing in their bedrooms, is adding to their sense of paranoia and in some cases making them more unwell.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists and the mental health charity Rethink have now said they want to see the rollout of the technology paused.
“It’s the sense big brother is always watching you – that’s really, really scary as a mental health patient, especially if you are experiencing paranoia,” Hat, 27, said.
“It also takes away your privacy and dignity which has already been reduced.”
Sophina, Nell and Hat have all spent time on mental health wards.
Now they are raising concerns about the use of camera surveillance placed in their bedrooms without explicit consent and want to see the use of it stopped.
“It felt like this invisible person was following me. It became really frightening and I got really unwell. I didn’t feel safe sleeping in bed with a camera… not knowing who was watching me or when,” Sophina said.
The technology – called Oxevision – can also monitor a patient’s pulse and breathing, and its makers said it has “been proven” to help keep them safe, but some have told BBC West Investigations they felt so frightened they slept in corridors, bathrooms and even outside.
Hat, who is from Weston-super-Mare and is now living in Exeter, is part of a campaign called Stop Oxevision.
Along with Sophina, 28, from the West Midlands, they have been contacted by dozens of others wanting to share their experiences.
“People have said that they’ve been afraid to sleep in their own beds,” Hat said.
“They’ve been sleeping on the floor of the bathroom. They’ve been sleeping under a desk or out in communal areas – just because they’re too afraid of the camera.
“For a lot of people when they are really unwell that can relate to fears or trauma around surveillance – whether that is paranoia or relates to past trauma, like sexual or domestic abuse.”
Nell, 36, from Brighton, said her experience of camera surveillance was “dehumanising” and “isolating”.
“It’s a really understandable thing to assume that adding an extra level of surveillance would be safety, but it’s really not. Nobody actually came into the room to engage with me.”
Oxevision is now used in a number of mental health hospitals across England.
Infrared cameras monitor patients while they are in their bedrooms, and the technology is designed to measure a pulse, breathing rate and movement to confirm a patient is safe, meaning fewer one-to-one observations are needed.
Hospital staff are not viewing the footage all the time – but can see it for short periods and if a risk is detected, an alert will sound and staff can attend to the patient immediately.
But Hat said the campaign group has been told hospitals are not always obtaining consent from patients and their families, and believes the technology is not always being used correctly, impacting on their privacy.
“We’ve heard quite a lot of places where the monitors can be seen [from] out in the corridors and out in the garden, so there’s nothing to stop other patients seeing that,” they said.
And Hat, Nell and Sophina are not alone in their concerns.
The ongoing Lampard inquiry into mental health deaths in Essex has also highlighted potential issues with the technology.
As part of its wider scope, it heard from Tammy Smith, the mother of Sophie Alderman, who believes Oxevision may have harmed her daughter’s mental health before her death in 2022.
The inquiry was told Sophie, 27, “felt a deep discomfort around cameras”, which triggered acute paranoia, believing she was under surveillance by the government.
Mrs Smith said she was “deeply concerned that the continual presence of an Oxevision camera in Sophie’s room” would have therefore caused her “real and significant distress”.
‘Dehumanised’
Consultant clinical psychologist, Dr Jay Watts, has been a patient in a mental health hospital and called the use of Oxevision “a scandal”.
“It is really playing on one of the worst things that can happen when we’re unwell, feeling that we’re being surveyed for someone else’s gain rather than what matters most and what is necessary most for us,” she said.
She said the technology was “attractive” to NHS managers because “it’s a way to save money”.
“Mental health is still very, very much the kind of pariah in terms of being underfunded and being under thought about, and really in terms of being dehumanised in a way that we don’t find elsewhere,” she added.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists and the mental health charity Rethink have also said they want to see the rollout of the technology paused.
“Video monitoring technology varies from CCTV to systems which electronically track vital signs and may have a positive role to play as part of this agenda,” a Royal College of Psychiatrists spokesperson said.
“However, before any further rollout of video monitoring technology is considered, we believe there needs to be significant research undertaken that is independently accredited and co-produced with patients, their carers and families.”
Rethink deputy chief executive, Brian Dow, said any form of surveillance must be done with “the explicit, clear and continued consent of patients… otherwise it risks doing more harm than good”.
“We think the technology should be paused until we have that framework which guides the use and the application of those technologies because that is what I think will provide the comfort to patients, to families and professionals working in that setting,” he added.
NHS England has said it has instructed mental health trusts to review its use of camera surveillance and will update its guidance in the coming months.
In response to the concerns, Oxehealth, which makes the technology, said: “The Oxevision platform, which features regulated medical device software, has been proven to help clinical teams enhance safety while providing therapeutic, personalised care to their patients.
“To support healthcare providers, national guidelines have been established to guide the implementation and effective use of the platform.”
But for Hat, Nell and Sophina that doesn’t go far enough.
“We totally understand the need to save money in the NHS but this absolutely isn’t the way to do it,” Hat said.
NewsBeat
Government borrowing hits highest December level for four years
Government borrowing rose more than expected in December, hitting the highest level for the month for four years, official figures show.
Borrowing – the difference between spending and tax revenue – was £17.8bn last month, £10.1bn more than in December 2023, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
Spending on public services, benefits, and debt interest were all up on the year, the ONS said, while an increase tax take was offset by a cut to National Insurance by the previous government.
The increased borrowing comes after interest rates paid on government debt surged earlier this month before falling back.
The spike in borrowing costs has threatened the government’s economic plans, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves facing pressure after figures last week showed the UK economy had flatlined.
The government has said growing the economy is its main priority to boost living standards.
Last month, the interest charged on government debt was £8.3bn, which was £3.8bn more than it was the year before. The amount marked the third-highest December debt interest repayments since monthly records began in January 1997.
Following the release of the figures, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones said the government would “root out waste to ensure every penny of taxpayer’s money is spent productively”.
“Economic stability is vital for our number one mission of delivering growth,” he added.
Politics
Keir Starmer’s Chagos deal threatening UK-US ‘special relationship’ as Trump to make verdict in DAYS
A key aide for Donald Trump has warned the surrender of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius will jeopardise the “special relationship” between the UK and US.
The decision to cede the islands has been described as “haphazard” by former Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie.
It comes as Downing Street is hoping for a friendly start to the relationship between the new Trump regime and Sir Keir Starmer.
Wilkie, who is leading the current transition team within the Pentagon, told the BBC: “I think it was a calamitous decision, I don’t think there was much thought put into it. “
He added that President Trump considered the move to be “something that could impinge on that special relationship” between the two nations, and that the Diego Garcia military base, on the largest of the Islands, provides “leverage to project power”.
A Foreign Office spokesman said: ‘”Given Diego Garcia’s status as a key strategic asset, it is right to discuss the agreement with the new US administration.”
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Cooper and Starmer pledge tougher checks to stop youngsters buying knives online
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer delivers a statement at 10 Downing Street in London,
PA
Online retailers will be forced to put in place tougher checks to stop youngsters buying knives after Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said it is “shockingly easy” for children to buy blades.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper told MPs it is a “a total disgrace” that Rudakubana, then 17, and with a history of violence, was able to buy a weapon online and promised new measures in the Crime and Policing Bill this spring.
Writing in The Sun, Starmer said: “It remains shockingly easy for our children to get their hands on deadly knives. The lessons of this case could not be clearer. Time and again, as a child, the Southport murderer carried knives. Time and again, he showed clear intent to use them.
“And yet, tragically, he was still able to order the murder weapon off of the internet without any checks or barriers. A two-click killer. This cannot continue. The technology is there to set up age verification checks, even for kitchen knives ordered online.
“We must now use it to protect our children from future attack and I will ensure that this happens.”
NewsBeat
Birmingham stabbing: Boy, 14, arrested on suspicion of murder after 12-year-old dies
A 14-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a 12-year-old boy was stabbed to death in Birmingham.
The boy was found with serious injuries near Scribers Lane, Hall Green, shortly after 3pm on Tuesday, West Midlands Police said.
He was taken to hospital but died from his injuries, according to the force.
Police said the boy’s family have been informed and are being supported by specially-trained officers.
The force said in a statement: “We are continuing to appeal for any information which could help in our investigation.
“We have set up our major incident public portal (MIPP) where members of the public can submit photos or video evidence.”
Police are asking anyone with information to use the MIPP or call 101 quoting log 3324 of January 21.
This is a breaking news story, more to follow…
NewsBeat
Birmingham teen arrested after boy, 12, dies in stabbing
A 14-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder, following the death of a 12-year-old boy who was stabbed in Hall Green, Birmingham on Tuesday.
The victim was found with serious injuries near Scribers Lane, shortly after 15:00 GMT.
He was taken to hospital but died as a result of his injuries.
West Midlands Police is appealing for information, as well as photo and video evidence.
NewsBeat
14-year-old boy arrested after 12-year-old dies in Birmingham stabbing
A 14-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder following a fatal stabbing in Birmingham.
NewsBeat
Women’s Ashes 2025: Amy Jones says England’s ‘best is yet to come’
England wicketkeeper Amy Jones says the team’s “best cricket is yet to come” as they prepare to salvage some pride from the remainder of the Women’s Ashes.
Australia retained the Ashes at the earliest opportunity with a thumping 57-run win in the first T20 at the Sydney Cricket Ground, which handed them an unassailable 8-0 lead in the points-based series.
Each white-ball match is worth two points and the hosts won the preceding one-day international series 3-0, with the second of three T20s taking place in Canberra on Thursday at 08:40 GMT.
Jones acknowledged the disappointment felt by the team and the fans, but remains confident that England they can win the remaining matches to finish the series with a draw.
“We still feel positive that we can put on a show and entertain and inspire you all,” Jones told BBC Sport.
“There’s been many moments where we could have won different games, which I guess makes it all the more frustrating.
“But we can absolutely draw from here. Our best cricket is yet to come and we’re all really excited about that.”
Jones reaffirmed England captain Heather Knight’s view that they are “not far off” beating Australia despite particularly heavy defeats in the most recent matches.
She also responded to criticism that the side have faced since the defeat in Sydney, after it emerged that spinner Sophie Ecclestone refused a television interview with pundit and former player Alex Hartley.
Hartley had questioned the fitness of some England players following the Women’s T20 World Cup in the autumn, which both coach Jon Lewis and captain Heather Knight denied was a problem.
“I can only speak for myself, but I just don’t like to look at it (comments in the media), because I know that it could get to me and therefore it doesn’t serve me,” Jones said.
“It’s their job to criticise, and of course it has an important purpose in growing the sport, but I don’t think I need the outside noise.”
NewsBeat
Xi and Putin hold video call after Donald Trump’s inauguration
Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin had a video call hours after Donald Trump was sworn in yesterday, pledging to bring bilateral ties to “greater heights”, according to state media on both sides.
Calling Xi a “dear friend”, Putin said Russia and China were building ties “on the basis of friendship, mutual trust and support” despite external pressure.
Xi called on Putin to “continue deepening strategic coordination, firming up mutual support, and safeguarding legitimate interests”.
Trump on Tuesday threatened tariffs on Beijing, calling it “an abuser”, and warned that “big trouble” will come for Moscow if it does not strike a deal to end war in Ukraine.
Putin told Xi, however, that any Ukraine settlement “must respect Russian interests”, according to foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov who spoke to reporters after the call.
Beijing has been accused of building up Moscow’s war machine by providing it with critical components for the conflict in Ukraine.
Trade between both countries reached a record $240bn (£191bn) in 2023, up more than 64% since 2021 – before Russia invaded Ukraine.
“Putin and Xi confirmed readiness to build relations with the US on a mutually beneficial and respectful basis, if the Trump team shows an interest”, Ushakov said.
He also said, however, that the call was “not connected with Trump’s inauguration in any way”.
The call lasted about one-and-a-half hours, during which Putin and Xi also discussed the situations in the Middle East, South Korea and Taiwan, according to Ushakov.
Chinese state media said Xi also expressed readiness to work with Putin in response to “external uncertainties”, without mentioning specifics.
Xi held a phone call with Trump last week, which the US president described as a “very good” discussion for both countries. They spoke about trade, fentanyl and TikTok, among other things, he said.
Putin has yet to speak with Trump, but congratulated him on state television hours before the inauguration.
NewsBeat
Tensions over when to make Southport attack details public
The Conservatives have called for the forthcoming public inquiry into the Southport murders to consider why the police, prosecutors and government did not make public more details about the killer last summer before his trial.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer have both said the government could not have risked Axel Radukabana walking free by ignoring advice that publishing information could have jeopardised his trial.
But Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp said it was likely an “information vacuum” had resulted in misinformation which “fuelled” the riots which followed the Southport attack.
He asked why the discovery of ricin and a copy of an al-Qaeda training manual in Radukabana’s house could not have been swiftly revealed.
Cooper said the government had wanted to make public that Radukabana had been referred to the counter-extremism programme Prevent, but could not because of legal advice.
Rudakubana was charged with three counts of murder and 10 of attempted murder on 31 July, shortly after launching his attack which killed Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine.
Within days, in early August, officers searching Rudakubana’s home found ricin and a file entitled “Military Studies in the Jihad against the Tyrants, the Al Qaeda training manual”.
The government was kept up-to-date about the discovery. The BBC has been told the ricin was in a Tupperware box in his bedroom.
Police rarely give details of an ongoing investigation without what they describe as a “policing purpose”.
In this case, false rumours were spreading online about the killer, including that he had migrated to Britain.
Senior officers felt under pressure to reassure the public, and dispel some of the rumours about the suspect by making clear he was in fact British.
But after discovering the ricin and manual they did not immediately make this public.
The investigation continued, with searches taking weeks because of the need for teams to wear hazmat suits and take a break every 40 minutes.
As they prepared to announce the outcome to the investigation, senior police officers became frustrated that the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) was advising them to withhold many details they felt should be made public, due to false claims online.
The killer was not charged with production of a biological weapon, and possession of information likely to be useful for terrorism, until 29 October 2024.
Sources close to the handling of the case say police wanted to announce these charges and reveal the discovery of the ricin and manual 11 days earlier, on 18 October, but there was a hold-up as the CPS and the police negotiated over what could be said publicly.
A source said the CPS “put a load of red pen through the statement”.
Rudakubana was finally charged with the additional two offences on 29 October.
It was at this point, three months after the Southport attacks, that police made public for the first time that the ricin and manual had been found.
He was not charged with preparing for acts of terrorism, because under current laws this would involve finding evidence of a political motivation or ideology, and none had been found.
The prime minister suggested on Tuesday the laws defining terrorism might need to change to take account of lone attackers without a clear motivation.
Rudakubana has now pleaded guilty to all the charges he faced and will be sentenced on Thursday.
Normally the risk of jeopardising the case falls away once all charges have been decided, either by a plea, or a jury reaching a verdict.
Crime reporters attended a police and CPS-led briefing setting out the entire case – but on Monday, the CPS again decided the information should not be published, this time until after the sentencing.
Despite that, the prime minister and home secretary have both given details about the case in the Commons.
Sir Keir Starmer’s deputy official spokesperson told political reporters on Tuesday afternoon that the prime minister had “not strayed” into areas related to sentencing.
Yet the CPS insists it needs to protect the sentencing process due to take place on Thursday.
Nick Price, CPS director of legal services, said: “The next stage of the process is for the prosecution to present our full case to the court on Thursday – including relevant details of the defendant’s past – so the judge can consider all the evidence when passing sentence.
“This will be the point when the full details of this case will be heard by the public.
“We recognise the profound interest in these proceedings, and it is important the prosecution case is presented to the court so the facts can be determined which may inform the sentence handed down.”
The CPS has taken this position because it believes the judge is entitled to make factual findings about the case and must also determine what weight to attach to different aspects of the evidence.
However, the Crime Reporters Association, representing around 50 senior crime and home affairs correspondents, has written to the CPS raising concerns that the service is breaching a long-established principle that there is no legal risk in publishing material about a case after guilty pleas and before sentencing.
The CPS said in its response that the “independence of the judge must be respected”.
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