Lord Murray of Blidworth
Main Page: Lord Murray of Blidworth (Conservative - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Lord Murray of Blidworth's debates with the Home Office
(1 day, 16 hours ago)
Lords ChamberTo ask His Majesty’s Government what steps they are taking to tackle ‘county lines’ drug trafficking.
The Government’s county lines programme is targeting exploitative drug-dealing gangs while breaking the organised crime groups behind this trade. The programme has closed more than 400 drug-dealing lines since July 2024 alone. The Government are committed to halving knife crime in the next decade and to tackling the violent gangs who lure children into crime. We will be introducing a new offence of criminal exploitation of children in the crime and policing Bill, which will be published very shortly.
My Lords, I admire the Minister’s indefatigability in addressing three of noble Lords’ Oral Questions today and I thank him for his Answer. An estimated 14,000 children are at risk of child criminal exploitation as a result of county lines drug trafficking. In 2022, it was reported that there had been 8,000 arrests since the introduction of the county lines programme in 2019; that is an average of 2,600 per year. In the last nine months, Home Office statistics appear to show that there have been around only 500 arrests. Why is this, and what are the Minister and his department planning to do about it?
The noble Lord will know that I can answer only for the period from July 2024 to September 2024, which are the latest figures. These figures show that 400 deal lines were closed, more than 200 dealers were arrested and charged, 500 further arrests were made, and there were 800 safeguarding referrals for children and vulnerable people. He asked what we can do in particular—yes, roughly 14,500 children have been impacted by county lines, and first and foremost we are looking at how we can support those children.
Very shortly—in fact, tomorrow—the new offence of criminal exploitation of children will be introduced in the police and crime Bill. I look forward to the noble Lord’s support on that. It will mean that we can go after the gangs who are luring young people into violence and crime, and we will have an additional penalty for individuals who exploit and damage children as a result. So there are short-term interventions to be made, but there are long-term measures too.
I would also say to the noble Lord that the additional 13,000 neighbourhood police officers will be an extremely important way of gathering intelligence, putting police boots on the ground and putting the fear of God into those people who are undertaking county lines activity.