Child Exploitation and Online Protection (CEOP) centre publishes 2nd year results and lays out the challenge ahead

London, 20 april/GNN/ -- CHILD EXPLOITATION AND ONLINE PROTECTION CENTRE News Release issued by The Government News Network on 20 April 2008

PLEASE NOTE EMBARGO
Not for publication or broadcast before
0001 hours Monday 21 Apr 2008

EMBARGO: 0001 HRS MONDAY 21 APRIL 2008

131 CHILDREN SAFEGUARDED FROM SEXUAL ABUSE
297 CHILD SEX OFFENDERS ARRESTED - A THREE FOLD INCREASE
6 ORGANISED PAEDOPHILE RINGS DISMANTLED
1.7 MILLION UK CHILDREN RECEIVING "SAFETY FIRST" EDUCATION

2nd year results from the Child Exploitation and Online Protection (CEOP)
Centre - the UK's dedicated organisation for tackling the sexual abuse
of children - shows the battle against child sex offenders continues to
gathers pace.

The CEOP Centre was set up in 2006 to deliver a national policing focus that
would track some of the UK's highest risk sex offenders, provide services
across the wider child protection community and deliver a holistic and
inclusive response that would get to the heart of the crime.

That focus has led to the safeguarding of 131 children and the arrest of
297 offenders during the last twelve months, with the arrest figures alone
being a three-fold increase on the organisation's first year results.

During the last year the organisation has processed almost 1 million
images of child sex abuse - using each unique image to help either build up
intelligence, track and bring offenders to account, or as vital parts of an
investigative jigsaw leading to 18 young victims being identified from this
area of work alone.

And offenders have been targeted not only individually, but also where they
have formed intricate paedophile networks with 6 such groups infiltrated
and dismantled throughout the year - all with international footprints.

Reports from both the child protection community within the widest sense
and members of the public - through the CEOP Centre's unique report abuse
virtual environment - continue on an upward trend with a total of 5,812
reports received and activated during the past year - a 76% increase on the
monthly average from 2006/07.

But tracking and bringing offenders to account is only part of the
CEOP operation. The past twelve months has also seen extensions to the
organisation's "safety first" education programme - Thinkuknow. This programme
provides a dedicated array of education materials that have now reached over
1.7 million UK children and which have been delivered by 11,000 specially
trained professionals - from teachers through to carers and boosted by new
services for parents.

2007/08 also saw:

21 operational deployments by the CEOP teams each run in conjunction with
local and, in some cases, international forces
25 of the UK's highest risk offenders located as a direct result of CEOP
activity of which 10 were located after their details were posted on
ceop.gov.uk/wanted
2600 law enforcement and child protection professionals attending CEOP
training courses either in the UK or overseas
Significant developments in tackling the sexual abuse of children including
the UK's first dedicated Behavioural Analysis Unit, the launch of the CEOP
Academy for child protection professionals and the setting up of a strategic
focus for tackling the trafficking of children in and out of Britain .

Launching the 2nd year figures, Jim Gamble, Chief Executive of the CEOP
Centre commented:

"I hope offenders look hard at these figures because they show not just how we
at CEOP are working, but are the culmination of just how far law enforcement
and the child protection community has come. They are the results of truly
collaborative action. By us all working together 131 children are now
safeguarded from some of the worst abuse imaginable - that is true impact.

"So I hope offenders take note. Look at the ways in which together we are
infiltrating your worlds, understanding your minds in order to limit deviant
behaviour and I hope you think again. If you are abusing children then we,
through applying collaborative skills, working with local and international
forces, harnessing the commitment from all sectors, will track you down.

"These results are really a testimony to the many child protection teams, local
and international forces, educational establishments, government departments,
parts of the online community and the wider industry sector who have all,
during the past 12 months, stepped up to the plate to help us in saying
enough is enough.

"Now we accelerate on. I want to see more work to convince online operators to
demonstrate their commitment to child safety in a clear and unambiguous way.
I want to see all organisations driving towards one programme of advice
and guidance for young people and their families and I want to see more
international co-operation. Our children deserve that."

Vernon Coaker is the Home Office Minister overseeing the work of the CEOP
Centre within government and commented:

"With the creation of the CEOP Centre we made a promise to make the fight
against the sexual abuse of children a high priority and to provide a national
focus for this crime. We also said that economy of scale and a partnership
approach had to be the answer. Two years on the concept is proven.

"It is delivering the kind of expertise and services that will keep
investigating officers ahead of the game, it is our primary focus for
outreach "safety first" activity and CEOP is where it should be - at the
hub for industry, government, policing and child protection when it comes
to keeping our children safe from the worst crime imaginable."

Ken Jones, President of the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO)
commented:

"We have seen great successes in tackling child sex abuse during the year
- major crackdowns on international networks that send a clear message to
offenders everywhere that this crime will not be tolerated. Those successes
are down to joint working and effective alliances. I call on all forces to
continue what clearly is the right way forward - to draw on the bedrock of
knowledge that sits in the CEOP Centre so that through their co-ordinated
power we can step across boundaries and borders and track offenders wherever
they may be."

NOTES TO EDITORS

A full copy of the CEOP Centre's Annual Review 2007/08 and 2nd year figures can
be downloaded from ceop.gov.uk/publications from 0001 hrs Monday 21 April 2008.

The CEOP Centre works in both online and offline environments to protect
children from sexual exploitation. Full information on all areas of work as
well as online safety messages and access to online reporting can be found
at ceop.gov.uk

Jim Gamble is available for interview from 0900 hrs on Monday 21 April.
Pre-recorded interviews before this time are not possible.

For further information contact:
Clive Michel, Miriam Rich, Vicky Gillings, Hannah Bickers
0870 000 3434

Source: Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre


2008-04-20 11:55:40 0339989 PRNEWSWIRE

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