Extracts from Parliamentary Proceedings - Feb 26
Extract from Lords committee stage (day 2) of the European Union
(Withdrawal) Bill Baroness Massey of Darwen (Lab):...Crimes
conducted online also cross borders. Child abuse material and
pornography are produced and disseminated across borders, and
research shows that 60% of such material is hosted in Europe. Being
able to tackle such crimes effectively demands that police forces,
the National Crime Agency and legal professionals need a
structure for cooperation. About 40% of...Request free trial
Extract from Lords
committee stage (day 2) of the European Union (Withdrawal)
Bill
Baroness Massey of Darwen (Lab):...Crimes conducted online also cross borders. Child abuse material and pornography are produced and disseminated across borders, and research shows that 60% of such material is hosted in Europe. Being able to tackle such crimes effectively demands that police forces, the National Crime Agency and legal professionals need a structure for cooperation. About 40% of Europol’s work is linked to initiatives that are either provided or requested by the UK. Will joint investigation teams continue to exist post Brexit? In 2016 the UK received the most funding of all EU member states to set up these teams—32 of them in total. Operations include Operation Golf, which tackled child trafficking and was highly successful in identifying and investigating a Romanian organised crime network which had links in the UK and other EU countries. A joint investigation team of the Metropolitan Police, the Romanian national police and Europol used personnel and databases to deal with the problem successfully... Lord Paddick (LD): My Lords, I apologise for not speaking at Second Reading; I took the view that I was unlikely to add anything new, bearing in mind the number of speakers. However, I have a few new things to add as a result of today’s debate. I had more than 30 years of service in the Metropolitan Police Service—which pales into insignificance when you consider the experience of the noble Lord, Lord Hogan-Howe—but I have also been briefed by the National Crime Agency lead on Brexit and by the director-general of the National Crime Agency on these issues.
The noble Lord, Lord Cormack, talked about the need
for the closest possible co-operation, which is what the National
Crime Agency would say, and that the measure of the success of
the negotiations would be how closely we can replicate the
existing arrangements. I believe that the Government’s position
is that they want to replicate all of these things as far as
possible, and that is what I took from what the Prime Minister
said. So to say that the Government cannot give away their
negotiating position by saying what the objective is going to be
is not, I think, true in this particular case. Perhaps the
Minister will tell us that what the Government seek to achieve is
as close as possible to the arrangements we have, but that is not
the question. The question is how the Government are going to
secure those arrangements; that is the critical question, not
what they are seeking to achieve, but how they are going to do
it. That is because there seems to be a contradiction between not
wanting to have any jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice
on the one hand and yet wanting to participate in things such as
the European arrest warrant on the other... Extract from Home Office Questions Nick Thomas-Symonds (Torfaen) (Lab): I am grateful to have had the opportunity to visit the National Crime Agency this morning to see the great work that its staff are doing to tackle crime. However, there is little doubt that the tech giants could be doing a great deal more. I know that the Prime Minister has recently asked them to do so, but she was also asking them to do more in her early months as Home Secretary nearly eight years ago. When can we have more emphasis on action rather than words? The Minister for Security and Economic Crime (Mr Ben Wallace): The hon. Gentleman is right to say that the empowerment that the internet gives to criminals, terrorists and radicalisers is extraordinary. That is why my right hon. Friend the Home Secretary has helped to lead the charge in the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism, and recently visited silicon valley to ensure that companies there start to deliver. We have seen significant changes involving the taking down of radicalising material and enabling us to catch the bad people who are doing the crimes. It is, however, important to note that one of the ways in which the National Crime Agency, the police and our intelligence services get to the bottom of these crimes is through the use of the powers given to them under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, whose effectiveness some Members in this House still try to block. Sarah Champion (Rotherham) (Lab): In Rotherham, 1,510 adult survivors of child sexual exploitation have now been identified by the National Crime Agency. Both the Minister and the Home Secretary know that unless there is a package of support around those adults, the cases will start to falter. Will the Minister support Rotherham’s funding application to get a package of care around those adult survivors? [904024] The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department (Victoria Atkins): I thank the hon. Lady for her question and for the meeting that she asked me to attend with leaders of Rotherham Council and the police. There has been and continues to be significant Government investment in response to child sexual exploitation in Rotherham, including £5.17 million to fund transformational change there, funding for police forces to meet the costs of unexpected events and up to £2 million for children’s social care in recognition of social workers’ increased workload resulting from the investigation of CSE. We have previously provided approximately £5.6 million for Operation Stovewood in the last two years, and we are considering an application for funding for the costs of investigation in 2017-18. Nigel Huddleston (Mid Worcestershire) (Con): Is the Home Office confident that it and its agencies can compete with the private sector, and recruit and retain people with the key digital and cyber skills that we need?
The Minister for Security and Economic Crime (Mr Ben
Wallace): For security reasons, I am unable to comment
on specific recruitment levels and on the geographical
distribution of police and intelligence agencies in specialist
areas, but I assure my hon. Friend that we are seeing strong
levels of recruitment. GCHQ and the National Crime Agency are
doing great work in encouraging the next generation of
cyber-sleuths through their Cyber First programme. |