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Bereaved families and MPs call for tougher measures on mobile phones for under-16s | Politics News

Bereaved families and MPs are urging the government to take tougher steps to protect younger teenagers from “horrific” content on social media. 

The Australian government’s decision to legislate for a smartphone ban for under 16s has reignited the debate in the UK about further restrictions, and a Labour MP is hoping to get government support for curbs on social media.

Stuart Stephens is among those campaigning for the government to go further and spoke to Sky News.

Olly Stephens, 13year-old schoolboy stabbed to death in Bugs Bottom fields, Emmer Green, Reading
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Olly Stephens, 13, was murdered in 2021

Olly Stephens with his father Stuart
Image:
Olly with his father Stuart

His son Olly was just 13 when he was murdered by other teenagers following a row which began on social media.

Mr Stephens said his son had been trying to stand up for another child who was a victim of “patterning” – humiliating someone and circulating it on video to blackmail them. Three 14-year-olds were jailed for Olly’s murder in 2021 – following an investigation involving 11 social media platforms.

“We are angry,” Mr Stephens said. “Without a doubt, without all that interaction he would still be here.

“There’s no accountability. These platforms are put out; kids use them, people get hurt, and we need to shine a light on that.

“I firmly believe that I lost my son because of weak governance and poor legislation, full stop, which is why we are doing what we are doing.

“I can’t show you any of the stuff that we saw on his phone, but it’s horrific. And a lot of that stuff you can’t unsee. And especially as a child, you’ve got a developing brain and you bombard them with horrific stuff that’s going to change them as an adult, and that’s not beneficial for society.”

Mr Stephens added: “You think this is never going to happen to you.

“He went into his world with the mobile phone. We need to bolster the legislation that’s already there, not weaken it.”

Olly's parents Stuart and Amanda Stephens said they have been left 'completely broken'
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Olly’s parents Stuart and Amanda Stephens outside Reading Crown Court in September 2021. Pic: PA

Police searching an alleyway near to where a 13-year-old boy died in Emmer Green, Reading, after being stabbed on Sunday.
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Police searching an alleyway near to where Olly was killed in July 2021. Pic: PA

Mr Stephens supports a private members’ bill being drafted by Labour MP Josh MacAlister which would raise the age of internet “adulthood” in which a child can give data to social media apps from 13 to 16 – in order to stop them being bombarded with unsolicited content via algorithms.

This would go further than the measures in the Online Safety Act, passed a year ago, which the regulator Ofcom will be implementing in phases from next year.

Ministers have promised sanctions for tech companies who fail to clamp down on harmful material, such as violence, explicit material and disinformation, and do not implement rigorous age verification for their platforms.

The Technology Secretary, Peter Kyle, is not minded to enact a full smartphone ban for under-16s but has said that nothing is “off the table”.

Labour MP Josh MacAlister is calling for a ban on smartphones in schools
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Labour MP Josh MacAlister is calling for a change in the law

Mr MacAlister, a former teacher and now MP for Whitehaven and Workington, believes parents need to be empowered to stop their children “doom-scrolling” on social media and is hoping to get government support.

The MP, who has held meetings with parents, health professionals and tech experts, told Sky News he was concerned by figures showing the average 12-year-old is spending 21 hours a week online.

“We’ve reached a point where this is a topic of discussion at almost every family dinner table in the country. Parents, teachers, children themselves recognise the scale of this problem,” Mr McAllister said.

“We’ve got the Online Safety Act here in the UK, which is a great landmark initial piece of legislation, focused on obviously harmful content – violent images, pornography, those sorts of things.

“But in places like Australia, states in the US and France, governments are saying actually there is a wider effect of addictive social media smartphones and that’s taking children away from other activities.

“My bill is about trying to put that debate here into parliament and to persuade the government to act, to do really one simple thing through a number of measures.

“That is to make the version of smartphones that children use under 16 different to those above 16 – safer, less addictive; kick children off of them after they’ve spent a fair bit of time on their mobile.

“I don’t think that this is an issue where the genie is out of the bottle. We can absolutely set some new rules around this.”

Read more:
Nothing ‘off table’ in smartphone ban debate
Plan to ban phones from schools dropped

Susie Husemeyer is trying to restrict phone access to her daughter, Amelia, 12
Image:
Susie Husemeyer is trying to restrict phone access to her daughter, Amelia, 12

Sky News spoke to parents who feel that even legal content is taking over their children’s lives. The group Smartphone Free Childhood, set up by parents, now has 150,000 members promoting the use of “brick” mobile phones without apps.

One of its members, Susie Husemeyer, is trying to restrict smartphone use for her daughter Amelia, who is 12 years old.

After giving her a smartphone in her last year of primary school and trying to impose a time limit, she had second thoughts and has now disabled the internet on the device.

Amelia said: “I have messages, music to listen to on the bus, and calls. There’s a lot of peer pressure that’s like, how come you don’t have WhatsApp? I get a lot of my friends saying, ‘Your parents are so boring. How come your parents don’t let you do this?'”

But while her friends are often glued to their phones, she supports her parents’ decision.

“It’s not good for your mental health, especially without any restrictions.

“Sometimes I think I wish I had WhatsApp, as people will have a birthday party and set up a group chat about it and I’ll be completely left out.

“But usually I don’t. It would be easier if everyone was banned.”

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Susie said: “There is no doubt about it, she is left out. I think that parents like me are just in such a hard place because we’re trying to do the right thing by our children.

“But at the same time, our children’s peers are all using phones that have all these things enabled. And these devices are just so addictive.

“My message to government would be we are in desperate need of preserving our children’s childhoods because childhood lasts a lifetime, a good childhood lasts a lifetime, and a distracted childhood lasts a lifetime too, in terms of how the brain develops.”

Some children’s charities say a total ban on smartphones or social media punishes teenagers and ignores the benefits of phones when used safely.

Infected blood compensation ‘to be extended’ to bereaved children of victims | UK News

The infected blood compensation scheme is to be extended to bereaved children who have lost one or two parents, Sky News understands.

This group has not been involved in the interim compensation scheme previously paid to victims of the scandal.

Tony Farrugia, who lost his haemophiliac father (and two uncles) to HIV/AIDs after being treated with infected blood products, described his meeting with the Paymaster General John Glen on Wednesday as “emotional”.

Mr Farrugia said this significant moment “wasn’t just about the money but that his loss has finally been recognised”.

He will now be able to apply to the compensation scheme after Sir Brian Langstaff’s report is published on 20 May.

“On a personal level, I just want it to end now. I want to move forward with my life,” Mr Farrugia said.

“To finally get that recognition that children will be recognized is massive and it will be really good to see the end of this.”

More on Infected Blood Inquiry

“I’m pleased that I’ve been able to report back to my group that that we’re moving forward on this. It’s been a long time coming and several meetings over the past years have amounted to nothing. And today was very different.”

A photo wall of infected blood scandal victims
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The Blood Inquiry which was announced in 2017 has seen evidence that shows these infected blood products were secretly tested on patients

Thousands of people died in the 1970s and 80s after infected blood products were imported from the United States to treat patients with blood clotting disorders. But these were used without being screened even though they had been farmed from prisoners, drug addicts and sex workers.

The Blood Inquiry which was announced in 2017 has seen evidence that shows these infected blood products were secretly tested on patients including young children even though the risks were widely known at the time.

A further 710 people have died since then and campaigners fear any more delays in awarding compensation will see more people dying before they get any money.

Campaigners have delivered a letter to Downing Street calling for faster payouts for the victims of the infected blood scandal.
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Campaigners in December delivered a letter to Downing Street calling for faster payouts for the victims of the infected blood scandal


John Glen, the cabinet minister responsible for the Government’s response to the Infected Blood Inquiry, on Wednesday began a series of meetings with campaigners representing infected and affected members of the community.

Other victims of the infected blood scandal have told Sky News they are also set to receive interim compensation payments ahead of full compensation in the Autumn.

Stuart McClean described his talks with Paymaster John Glen at a meeting in Whitehall on Wednesday morning as “promising” and added “I think he’s listened and I think he gets what we were saying to him.

“He’s looking at trying to go for another interim payment. He’s got to get that signed off. We don’t know when. We don’t know what it’ll be. He said that he was looking at another interim payment.”

Mr McClean is uncertain if the payments would be for all victims affected by the scandal or the timeline: He didn’t stipulate.

“But hopefully it is for both. And then hopefully compensation starts arriving October onwards. He said that he’s working as fast as he can. Obviously he’s got to take it to the Chancellor and to the Prime Minister, but he is working as fast as he can.”

Read more:
Infected Blood Inquiry: Victims and victims’ families lobby Westminster for compensation
Rishi Sunak says government ‘speeding up’ compensation for infected blood victims

In October 2022, the Government made interim compensation payments to infected individuals and bereaved partners who were registered with any of the four UK infected blood support schemes.

Mr McClean was infected with the potentially deadly Hepatitis C virus as an eight-year-old schoolboy after he was misdiagnosed as a haemophiliac. He was only told about his life threatening infection as an adult.

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He said he asked the Paymaster General not to make any Government announcements on 20 May, the day Sir Brian Langstaff’s long awaited report into the greatest NHS treatment scandal in history will be published.

“Please give us a day on the 20th not to make any announcement. A sad day for the truth to come out and let the public hear the truth. But I think we’re nearly there for justice, Mr McClean said.

Bereaved parents whose children took own lives demand more access to content they were exposed to online | Science & Tech News

Bereaved parents of children who took their own lives want authorities to take online histories into account when determining their cause of death.

The mother of Archie Battersbee, who died in August 2022 after a “prank or experiment” that went wrong, joined other families to demand more access to content their children were exposed to online.

“I think it should be available and be part of the whole investigation,” Hollie Dance told Sky News.

“When it comes to a child’s death, everything should be looked into.

“Obviously they look into the parents, the home life, school life. Why not look into social media?”

Ms Dance’s 12-year-old son Archie died after being found unconscious at home four months earlier.

She believes he may have been taking part in an online challenge, but a coroner ruled his death an accident.

“We’ve got his phone now, so let’s go back and see what this child was into,” she said.

“What did he watch? Did he look at a lot of social media? Didn’t he?”

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August 2022: ‘I’m broken’

Molly Russell ruling ‘opened our eyes’

Ian Russell campaigned to get access to his daughter Molly‘s social media history after she was found dead in her bedroom in November 2017.

It emerged Molly, 14, had viewed masses of content related to suicide, depression, and anxiety online.

In a landmark ruling at an inquest in September, a coroner ruled she died not from suicide, but “an act of self-harm while suffering from depression and the negative effects of online content.”

Ms Dance, who was joined by Mr Russell at a meeting of bereaved families this week, said: “Having Molly’s dad here has given us knowledge that we didn’t know.

“It opened our eyes to things that we can potentially do and use moving forward.”

Read more:
‘It was shocking to see material was that bad’

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‘Losing friend at that age was scarring’

‘What has happened to you?’

Liam Walsh’s daughter Maia died just weeks before her 14th birthday.

An inquest into her death opened in October, but a hearing date is yet to be set.

Mr Walsh the coroner will have access to Maia’s full social media history before determining what caused her death.

“The question I asked as I ran my fingers through her hair, and I held her belly, was what has happened,” he said.

“What has happened to you? I’m still asking that question today.”

Read more:
Prince William calls for greater online safety

Maia Walsh
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Maia Walsh

‘We have this mission’

In her first interview since her son Isaac’s death, Lisa Kenevan told Sky News she is on a mission to bring change.

“He was a typical 13-year-old boy with a good group of friends,” she said.

“He was very loving. We’d hold him every day, and he’d hold us every day.”

She thinks social media might hold clues to what drove Isaac to his death.

“Our world has just been awful, but we have this mission, this need, this want to get out there for every other parent that’s been going through this, to either come forward or know they’ve got support,” she said.

“And to really push forward to get some awareness about the social platforms – that things need to be stepped up.”

Read more:
Online Safety Bill is certainly too late

The parents of Molly Russell, Archie Battersbee, Isaac Kevevan, Maia Walsh, and Christoforos Nicolaou are campaigning for greater access to their children's social media history
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The parents of Molly Russell, Archie Battersbee, Isaac Kevevan, Maia Walsh, and Christoforos Nicolaou are campaigning for greater access to their children’s social media history

‘Threats were made to hurt us’

The families met at the home of George and Areti Nicolaou, whose son Christoforos, 15, took his own life in 2022 after joining an online forum where he was encouraged to do dangerous challenges.

His parents described him as “the heart of the house”, who was “bringing joy and happiness in our home”, but the challenges he did escalated and made him miserable.

“There were challenges like he’s got to not go to sleep at all, then go to school in the morning,” his parents said.

“Then there were challenges like you’ve got to chat with us through the night. Then there were challenges where they made him get his phone and record the whole house.

“Then threats were made to hurt us, his parents, should he not complete the challenges he’s been asked to do.”

George and Areti have launched the Christoforos Charity Foundation in their son’s memory.

They hope their work with other families to raise awareness of online harms ensure his legacy reaches even further.

The families’ meeting came as the government’s Online Safety Bill makes its way through parliament.

The proposed law – which aims to regulate internet content to help keep users safe, and also to make companies responsible for the material – has been repeatedly held up over concerns about its impact on freedom of expression.

Surveys suggest it has the backing of a majority of UK adults and charities like the NSPCC and Barnardo’s.

Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK