Pressure mounts on UK to ban anti-child electronic devices
The
Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly earlier today (25 June)
unanimously agreed that Governments and local authorities in member
states should ban electronic devices that deliberately emit a
high-pitched noise to deter under 25s from using public spaces and
facilities.
The Children’s Rights Alliance for England (CRAE) has been pushing for
the prohibition of these devices for several years and alerted UN human
rights bodies to lack of action by the former Government to protect the
fundamental human rights of children and young people. In October 2008, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child recommended Ministers 'reconsider
... the mosquito devices insofar as they may violate the rights of
children to freedom of movement and peaceful assembly, the enjoyment of
which is essential for the children’s development...'.
Carolyne Willow, CRAE’s national co-ordinator, says:
‘Thanks to the Council of Europe, these nasty devices may soon be
discarded to the history books. It tells you something about our culture
that sales of this device have been highest in the UK and no former
Minister made any attempt to bring forward legislation to protect
children and young people from businesses and public authorities
conspiring to keep them away from public spaces and facilities. Indeed,
the former Home Secretary supported the devices.’
The Parliamentary Assembly's report notes that legislation to ban
the devices has already been drafted in Belgium and some local
authorities in Council of Europe member states have taken action. In May
2007, CRAE warmly welcomed the ban introduced by Lancashire County
Council. The Council Leader Hazel Harding said at the time: '[Supporting
their use] would send out completely the wrong message about the county
council’s attitude towards young people [and]
The simple fact is that if these devices singled out any other
group in society there would be an enormous outcry'.
Carolyne Willow adds:
'These devices not only attack the fundamental rights of young
people, they also violate the rights of babies and young children, and
young disabled people. An infant in a push-chair being wheeled into an
area affected by the high-pitched noise could be in considerable pain
but how would parents or carers know the cause of such distress?'.
In the light of
today’s news, CRAE has written to the Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg
to urge him not to wait for a decision from the Committee of Ministers
before taking action. It could take up to six months to get the
Committee’s decision: the coalition Government could commit now to a
banning measure in the forthcoming Freedom Bill.

