
Ministers ‘oblivious' to UK's scale of violence against women and girls, say MPs
Ministers appear to be 'oblivious' to the true scale of harm caused by violence against women and girls and must do more to 'reverse the worrying rise in misogyny', MPs have said.
Parliament's cross-party public accounts committee heard evidence that women's refuges are forced to turn down 65% of requests for support amid soaring cases, while other dedicated services operating in communities are only able to help about half of those who request it.
Highlighting figures that show at least one in 12 women each year are affected by violence and one in five recorded crimes relate to violence against women and girls, the committee said the Home Office's way of monitoring prevalence did not include all types of crime.
The MPs also say it is a 'particular concern' that in spite of evidence that the age range of those most likely to become a victim or perpetrator of sexual violence is between 11 and 20, the Home Office does not include under-16s in its information gathering.
Launching the government's promise to halve incidents of violence against women and girls within a decade last year, the home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said 'our mission is for the whole of government, agencies, organisations and communities to work together'.
But commenting on the findings, committee member Anna Dixon said: 'While it was welcome to hear of recent efforts to better coordinate action across departments, officials' evidence caused alarm bells to ring.
'On some types of harm, government appears to be oblivious to the true scale and there remains scant evidence or learning from what is working locally.
'It is vital that the Home Office seizes this opportunity to lead and coordinate strong action across departments to ensure victims and survivors have access to the services and support they need and deserve, and that as a society we reverse the worrying rise in misogyny.'
The committee also said the government's approach lacked an emphasis on prevention measures that it said were necessary to achieve long-term change.
In addition, the MPs called for clarity on how work with boys would be undertaken to 'prevent harmful attitudes perpetuating', and how the safety of young people online would be improved.
The committee added: 'The Department for Education needs to step up and take a more proactive approach given the proliferation of misogynistic attitudes across social media platforms, and their influence on young men and boys, highlighted by the [committee] as a key area in need of attention.
'The increase in the number of cases reported to the Revenge Porn Helpline from 521 to 22,000 in just nine years, serves to highlight the evolving nature of [violence against women and girls].
'The [committee] fears this is symptomatic of a wider issue across a range of departments who appear to have limited understanding of the scale of the challenges they face in addressing this issue.'
In a series of recommendations, the MPs called on the Home Office to outline how all departments would be held to account for their contributions to tackling the issue.
The minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, Jess Phillips, said: 'As part of our ambitious pledge to halve violence against women and girls in a decade, we have already put domestic abuse specialists in 999 control rooms in the first five forces, introduced new domestic abuse protection orders in select areas, and set out a clear process for police to release information about online stalkers.
'Our new violence against women and girls strategy, coming this summer, will take a cross-government approach with prevention at its heart – to better protect victims, support their journey to justice and hold perpetrators to account.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
28 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
DNA retrieved from suitcase pulled from wreckage may solve Lockerbie bombing riddle
Investigators have made a potential breakthrough in the Lockerbie bombing case after finding DNA evidence from the suitcase used to carry the explosive. Scientists are reported to have gathered genetic profiles from the suitcase lining and an umbrella packed into the luggage compartment of the doomed Pan Am Flight 103 after re-examining items salvaged from the wreckage in December 1988. Prosecutors now hope to be able to link the profile to alleged bomb-maker Abu Agila Masud Kheir Al-Marimi, known as Masud, who is waiting to go on trial in the US, with the DNA to be compared to swabs taken from the suspect. The Libyan, who is accused of playing a major role in what remains the UK's worst terror atrocity that killed 270 people, was due to face a jury last month but the trial was postponed as a result of his poor health and the complexity of the case. It is now not expected to begin until next spring. The Sunday Times has reported that US court papers identify a list of expert witnesses for the prosecution, including Dr Nighean Stevenson, a leading authority in DNA analysis at the Scottish Police Authority (SPA), who has re-examined exhibits from the crash site more than 30 years ago. The papers state: 'Dr Stevenson examined items relating to an umbrella and an item relating to the lining of a suitcase. 'These items were examined using specialised lighting, and DNA samples were taken from each. Part of the wreckage of a passenger jet that came down on Lockerbie in December 1988 Alleged bomb-maker Abu Agila Masud Kheir Al-Marimi, known as Masud, is waiting to go on trial in the US The scenes of devastation in the wake of the Lockerbie bombing in 1988 'The DNA profiles obtained from these items were of varying quality and were generally commensurate with the expectations of these items.' They add: 'Analysis of a DNA reference sample relating to the accused nominal [Masud] has yet to be carried out. 'When a DNA profile relating to this individual has been generated, it will thereafter be compared to any suitable DNA profiles which have already been obtained.' Masud, 74, is accused of making the bomb which brought down Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Dumfries and Galloway, on December 21, 1988. All 259 passengers and crew on board were killed along with 11 residents in the town when wreckage fell to the ground. Masud, a bomb-maker for the Libyan External Security Organisation, was extradited to the US at the end of 2022 after allegedly confessing to building the Lockerbie bomb and taking it in a suitcase from Tripoli to Malta. His defence team are set to argue that the confession was extracted in Libya under duress and is therefore inadmissible. But Dick Marquise, the FBI special agent who led the US end of the original investigation said: 'If you've got his DNA [in the suitcase]... it would knock down the building blocks of his potential defence.' Mr Marquise told the publication he was not aware of any DNA evidence collected in the immediate aftermath of the bombing in 1988, adding: 'It was much too new a science.' Masud, who was taken into US custody in 2022, will be the first person accused of playing a part in the bombing to be tried in a US court. Abdelbaset Al Megrahi and co-accused Al Amin Khalifa Fahima stood trial in a Scottish court sitting in the Netherlands during 2000 and 2001. Megrahi was found guilty of mass murder and sent to Scotland to serve his life. Fahima was acquitted and returned to Libya. The Scottish Government released terminally ill Megrahi on compassionate grounds in 2009, three years before he died of cancer.


Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Drum and bass festival goer, 21, dies at event 'shut down for being too hot'
A 21-year-old man has died at a drum and bass festival was closed down for being too hot. The man was rushed from Margate Drum and Bass to the hospital - the event was then shutdown early. Organisers of the event at Dreamland Margate, an amusement park in Kent, announced on social media that it was forced to 'close early' as 'it was just too hot today'. The event was due to end at 10:45pm Saturday evening but organisers issued an announcement at 6:30pm to say it would be closing prematurely, urging gig-goers to 'get home safely'. A force spokesperson told The Sun today: 'Kent Police was made aware of a report that a man in his 20s, who was taken to hospital following a medical incident at Dreamland in Margate on the afternoon of Saturday 28 June 2025, subsequently died. 'Officers are making enquiries into the circumstances of the death which is not believed to be suspicious. 'A report is being prepared for the coroner.' A note was sent to all members of Thanet District Council by the authority's chief executive Colin Carmichael last night, KentOnline reported. An unnamed councillor told KentOnline that his note said: 'Very sadly, a 21-year-old man was taken by blue light services from Dreamland and died at QEQM (Hospital). 'We understand that medical advisers approved the medical provisions set up by Dreamland for this event, but of course, police will carry out a proper investigation. 'We are not intending to speculate until we have the results of that.' The festival, which was open only to over 18-year-olds was due to be headlined by Andy C, alongside performances from Wilkinson, K Motionz, Mozey and Fish56octagon. A festival goer told KentOnline that Mozey came on stage to tell everyone to leave the festival. They said a few people were angry but most other revellers were calm about the situation. A crowd of around 7,000 were evacuated shortly after the announcement. A man announcing the closure on the tannoy reportedly said the closure was due to staff being 'inundated' by people needing medical assistance. It follows the death of 17-year-old Emily Stokes who died in hospital last year after attending the same festival in Kent. Her sister Megan said she 'passed away from an overdose from being spiked'. Megan has since paid tribute to her older sister, saying she was the 'kindest person you could ever meet' and 'was so full of life'. Ms Stokes was found to have 5,500 micrograms of MDMA per litre of the teenager's blood – more than three times higher than the level that has been fatal in other drug overdose cases. The inquest was also told that a batch of the drug circulating in the area at the time was laced with lethal fentanyl.


The Sun
44 minutes ago
- The Sun
Mum accused of deliberately getting pregnant in bid to avoid jail time after smuggling steroids into husband's prison
A JUDGE accused a mum of deliberately getting pregnant in a bid to avoid jail after smuggling drugs into her husband's prison. Tanya Parker helped get steroids, mobile phones and tobacco into HMP Birmingham in 2019. 3 3 The mum-of-four helped her husband David Bradley smuggle them in while he was in jail himself. The couple, from Coventry, appeared at Birmingham Crown Court and were previously warned they likely faced being jailed straight after. Cathlyn Orchard, defending 36-year-old Parker, revealed to the court that she was between six to seven weeks pregnant. Astonished Judge Dean Kershaw replied: "Are you seriously telling me that? Knowing the position these two are in, she's pregnant again? "She understands there's something called contraception, having a child knowing the position both of them are in," BirminghamLive reported. The barrister said: "I haven't gone into that detail. She is not wanting to be pregnant and she is conflicted in saying that because she is going to keep the child. It couldn't have come at a worse time." Judge Kershaw responded: "It all smacks to me it is another thing she is mentioning to avoid custody. "It maybe regrettable but let's apply common sense." However the judge decided not to jail Parker. Having admitted two offences of conspiring to convey prohibited articles into prison she was sentenced to an 18-month community order with 100 hours of unpaid work and 30 days of rehabilitation activity. Judge Kershaw said Bradley, aged 34, had abused his partner's loyalty. Bradley, who admitted the same two offences as his wife as well as a charge relating to having a phone in prison, was sentenced to 24 months suspended for 18 months. He was ordered to carry out 160 hours of unpaid work and 30 days of rehabilitation activity. 3