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Parents
put off taking children to casualty for fear of abuse allegations
Most people (78%)
believe that too many parents are made to feel afraid just for smacking
their children, a new poll reveals today. And 59% believe that some
parents who smack their children are so worried about false allegations
of abuse that they are put off taking a child with an accidental injury
to the doctor.
Tomorrow (Tuesday 2 November), MPs will debate changing the smacking
law. Three options will be put to the House of Commons: leave the law
unchanged, remove the ‘reasonable chastisement’ defence
in some circumstances, or completely ban all smacking.
This poll shows that one in five parents (19%) have worried about smacking
in public for fear of someone making an allegation against them. Other
findings in the poll show that Labour voters are strongly supportive
of smacking. Nearly eight out of ten Labour voters (77%) think it is
sometimes necessary to smack a naughty child. A similar percentage of
Liberal Democrats voters (78%) agree – this is despite the fact
that the party is committed to a total ban on smacking. Michael Howard
is to give Tory MPs a free vote on Tuesday, but this poll finds 90%
of Conservative voters support smacking. The poll findings are broadly
comparable with the Office for National Statistics data showing that
88% of people think it is sometimes necessary to smack a naughty child.
More results and details about the poll are available.
Colin Hart, Director of The Christian Institute, said, “Those
who want to make smacking a criminal offence have created a climate
of fear amongst parents. So much so that most people believe that some
parents who smack their children are so worried about false allegations
of abuse that they are put off taking a child with an accidental injury
to the doctor. Those who want to ban smacking will end up damaging children’s
interests.
“Changing the law will greatly exacerbate this climate of fear.
Parents who use ordinary smacking already feel like they have to look
over their shoulder for fear of politically-correct snoopers reporting
them. If the smacking law is changed the situation will be made very
much worse. Everyone agrees that children should be protected from genuine
abuse, and the current law does exactly that. The current law has the
right balance between protecting children and protecting parents.”
Note to Editors:
CommunicateResearch interviewed a random sample of 1009 adults aged
18+ by telephone on 27-28 October 2004. Interviews were conducted across
the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all
adults.
For
more information contact: Mike Judge on 0191 281 5664
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The
Christian Institute, Registered Charity No 100 4774 seeks to promote
the Christian faith in the UK
Registered Office: First Floor, Cathedral Buildings, Dean Street, Newcastle
upon Tyne, NE1 1PG
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