Government Takes Step Closer To Banning Parents From Beating Children

Parents Banned From Beating Children (Image Credit: www.childreninwales.org.uk)
Children in Wales (Image Credit: www.childreninwales.org.uk)

A new law banning parents from smacking their children has been introduced in Wales.

Concise News reports that the new legislation, which was announced on Monday, is about being signed into law as the Welsh government introduced the bill to the national assembly.

If passed, the children bill will make Wales become the first country in the UK to stop fathers, mothers and other adults acting in a parental capacity from smacking children to punish them.

The government-led bill seeks to remove the common law defence of reasonable punishment, which is currently available to parental figures if accused of assault or battery against a child.

Also, when passed, the bill would act as the first divergence of core criminal law between Wales and England, where parents would still be able to legally and physically punish a child as long as it is deemed “reasonable”.

However, the bill would not prevent a parent from grabbing a child about to step out onto a busy road or brushing a child’s hair against his or her will.

“We are sending a clear message that the physical punishment of children is not acceptable in Wales,” Julie Morgan, Wales’ deputy minister for health and social services, says.

“What may have been deemed as appropriate in the past is no longer acceptable. Our children must feel safe and be treated with dignity. The legislation will be accompanied by an awareness-raising campaign and support for parents.”

No date has been fixed for the new legislation to come into place. But the bill is expected to be scrutinised by Assembly Members (AMs), with Welsh government sources confident it will be passed by the country’s national assembly and brought into law after achieving Royal Assent by Spring 2020.

The Welsh government further discloses that the legislation will be accompanied by an awareness-raising campaign and support for parents.

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