
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This week the Abuse team at Hugh James discusses the All-Party Parliamentary Groups (APPG): Hearings into “positions of trust” in faith settings.
The APPG is investigating whether the definition of “positions of trust” in the Sexual Offences Act 2003 ought to be amended to include faith settings.
Currently, this “positions of trust” covers educational, youth justice and medical settings. This is effectively to ensure, for example, a teacher who is 30 is not permitted to engage in a sex act with a student who is 17, despite that student being over the age of consent, which is 16.
This is because the nature of the relationship renders what is ostensibly consensual, non-consensual. The reasons for this are many, but mainly because of the undue influence, power imbalance and vulnerabilities which surround the child in the context of the relationship.
It does not currently include within that definition faith settings. As such, a priest who is 40 could have a sexual relationship with a child member of the church who is 17 and this would be legal.
Hugh James were asked to speak to the APPG on behalf of the Ex-Jehovah’s Witnesses Advocates Opposing Crimes Against Children (the “Group”), as Sam Barker of the Hugh James abuse team represents the Group at the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse’s upcoming hearings into safeguarding in faith settings.
It is the view of the Group that Jehovah’s Witnesses as a religion demonstrates perfectly why the law needs to change given the significant trust and power placed in adult male members of the faith, such that one of those members engaging in a sex act with a child in the congregation ought to be illegal. However, the Group submits this is relevant to all religions.
The Group submitted that:
Overall, this change would put the UK in line with other common law jurisdictions like Australia, where this conduct is criminalised. In Victoria, faith settings is included in the definition of “care, supervision or authority”, which is:
This week the Abuse team at Hugh James discusses the All-Party Parliamentary Groups (APPG): Hearings into “positions of trust” in faith settings.
The APPG is investigating whether the definition of “positions of trust” in the Sexual Offences Act 2003 ought to be amended to include faith settings.
Currently, this “positions of trust” covers educational, youth justice and medical settings. This is effectively to ensure, for example, a teacher who is 30 is not permitted to engage in a sex act with a student who is 17, despite that student being over the age of consent, which is 16.
This is because the nature of the relationship renders what is ostensibly consensual, non-consensual. The reasons for this are many, but mainly because of the undue influence, power imbalance and vulnerabilities which surround the child in the context of the relationship.
It does not currently include within that definition faith settings. As such, a priest who is 40 could have a sexual relationship with a child member of the church who is 17 and this would be legal.
Hugh James were asked to speak to the APPG on behalf of the Ex-Jehovah’s Witnesses Advocates Opposing Crimes Against Children (the “Group”), as Sam Barker of the Hugh James abuse team represents the Group at the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse’s upcoming hearings into safeguarding in faith settings.
It is the view of the Group that Jehovah’s Witnesses as a religion demonstrates perfectly why the law needs to change given the significant trust and power placed in adult male members of the faith, such that one of those members engaging in a sex act with a child in the congregation ought to be illegal. However, the Group submits this is relevant to all religions.
The Group submitted that:
Overall, this change would put the UK in line with other common law jurisdictions like Australia, where this conduct is criminalised. In Victoria, faith settings is included in the definition of “care, supervision or authority”, which is:
40 Listeners
833 Listeners
182 Listeners
705 Listeners
634 Listeners
972 Listeners
177 Listeners
256 Listeners
47 Listeners
115 Listeners
6 Listeners
3,436 Listeners
60 Listeners
45 Listeners
1,938 Listeners