Chatbot which helps exploited children in Suffolk wants to go national

It's looking for more funding to roll out its service nationally

Author: Abi SimpsonPublished 22nd Mar 2022

A charity chatbot which helps children who've been exploited in Suffolk is looking for more funding so it can roll its services out nationally.

Is This Ok?, which was set up by Missing People and the NSPCC's Childline, is run by Sara Rowbotham, the frontline sexual health worker who helped uncover widespread child sexual exploitation in Rochdale.

It's been accessed 2,359 times where it's available in Waltham Forest, Bradford, Stoke-on-Trent, Suffolk and Bedfordshire.

Children who've contacted the service include a pregnant teenager who'd run away, a girl whose older boyfriend was pressuring her to use drugs, and a girl who was self-harming after being raped by her sports coach.

After an hour-long chat with advisers, a girl who disclosed historic sexual abuse from a family friend said: "Thank you so much, you've really helped me I thought that I was going to end it today but you've really helped me see that it isn't my fault - thank you again."

It all comes as new Government figures show that children in care who are victims of exploitation are going missing, on average, ten times a year.

Around half of children in care identified by their local council as being a victim of exploitation went missing from care between 2018 and 2020, according to figures sourced by the charities Missing People and ECPAT UK.

In 2020, 3,033 looked-after children were identified by local authorities as exploited - up 5% from the previous year.

Of these 48% - 1,468 children - went missing.

In comparison, figures from the Department for Education show that one in 10 children in care went missing in 2020-21, while in the UK around one in 200 children are reported missing every year.

Each child went missing an average of 10.6 times in 2020. Over the three years, more than 44,000 incidents of a child going missing were recorded.

The charities sent Freedom of Information requests to 218 UK local authorities and shared the findings with the PA news agency.

Over the three years the number of exploited children in care rose by 13.8%, from 2,615 in 2018 to 3,033 in 2020.

In 2018, 52% and in 2019 53% of these children went missing.

While the proportion of missing children fell slightly in 2020, the charities say this should be seen in the context of the coronavirus lockdowns and related measures.

Jane Hunter, senior research and impact manager at Missing People, called the figures "staggering".

She said: "These children may be going missing in extremely high-risk situations, including county lines and sexual exploitation and some will have experienced very serious harm while away.

"Every time a child goes missing should be seen as a key intervention point, when the safeguarding needs of children are identified and support can be put in place.

"The fact that these children were going missing on average over 10 times per year suggests that much more needs to be done to keep exploited children safe."

Patricia Durr, ECPAT UK chief executive, said: "Going missing is a cry for help and given the harm children face, it's crucial that going missing is understood as an indicator of exploitation.

"For children who are known to have been exploited, safeguarding partners must take steps to ensure they are safeguarded from further missing episodes, and from harm and exploitation.

"We know this is the right approach: it is shocking is that this vulnerable group of children are continually failed and left at risk of further abuse."

Research has shown that exploited children are at high risk of going missing. A child going missing is a common result of criminal and sexual exploitation.

Young people can be lured or coerced away from safety by groomers, go missing due to their involvement in county lines, or disappear while trying to escape the consequences of exploitation.

The charities said that, during the pandemic county lines tactics evolved, with children remaining in trap houses for longer, more local children being recruited to avoid being stopped in public.

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