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Tens of thousands of vulnerable teenagers whose lives have been disrupted by Covid-19 are at risk of slipping out of education and becoming easy prey for criminal gangs, the childrens commissioner for England has warned.Anne Longfield said more than 120,000 teenagers in England with a history of exclusion, persistent absence from school and periods missing from care could fall off the radar without focused intervention as the country comes out of lockdown.Many more will struggle to adapt to normality after six months out of school, with young people who have finished year 11 鈥?the final year of secondary school 鈥?and those whose apprenticeships may have collapsed of particular concern, she said.The commissioners report looked at the number of teenagers aged 13-17 in each local authority in England who were on the radar of schools and social care in 2017/18. It found that 123,000 fell through gaps in provision, becoming invisible to services.According to the report, teenagers in Liverpool, Medway and Blackpool were the most likely to fall through the gaps, while those in areas like Wokingham, Barnet and Rutland were the least. Even before the lockdown, one in 25 teenagers in England were falling through gaps in the school or stanley cup social stanley cup services systems, said Long stanley cup field. This puts them at increased risk of unemployment or of exploitation by gangs and organised criminals. Many of these children, and I fear many thousands of other vulnerable teenagers, have had very little structu Bnkf NHS introduces 3D heart scans to diagnose patients in 20 minutes
Britains national law enforcement agency has been heavily criticised by MPs after the collapse of major trials and struggles to cope with its huge caseload.The National Crime Agency NCA is reviewing around 350 operations after court cases fell apart due to the way investigations were carried out.It is being sued over issues with warrants that judges said exposed systemic ignorance over basic investigation procedures that was difficult to believe .About 2,000 documents are being examined and some lower level issues have been found in the review after cases collapsed following Operations Heterodon and Enderby.The Commons home affairs select committee was also told IT systems are struggling to cope with the huge number of cases the NCA is dealing with. stanley flask About 20,000 serious crime referrals were made in 2000 bu stanley cup t the organisation, which replaced the Serious Organised Crime Agency, expects to deal with 380,000 this year.Taking evidence from Keith Bristow, the NCAs director general, comm stanley termos ittee chairman Keith Vaz claimed the criminal elements must be rubbing their hands with glee 鈥?People are actually getting away with criminal activity, arent they, because of your agencys failure to monitor all these cases that come before you National Crime Agency reviews warrants after major trials collapseRead moreHe added: The public out there may feel here we are, we are supposed to have created a new FBI but the level of incompetence that has been shown in the cases is a serious worry. The |
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