82% rise in online grooming crimes against children in the last 5 years
We are urging MPs and tech companies to back the Online Safety Bill following new research on the scale of online grooming.
- Almost 34,000 online grooming crimes against children were recorded by UK police since we first called for social media regulation.
- 1 in 4 online grooming crimes in the last 5 years were against primary school children.
- 73% of crimes involved Snapchat and Meta, we are urging tech companies to accept regulation and prioritise children’s safety.
UK police recorded almost 34,000 online grooming crimes against children as we waited for the Online Safety Bill.
MPs and Lords are going to make the final decisions on the Online Safety Bill next month. We are highlighting these figures to show the true scale of child sexual abuse on social media.
You can help us end child abuse online
Your MP is your voice in parliament, write to them and tell them why they should act to make the online world safer for children and pass a strong Online Safety Bill in the coming weeks.
Freedom of Information data
We sent Freedom of Information requests and asked for data on recorded offences of Sexual Communication with a Child offences, from all UK police forces since the offence was introduced in 2017.
The data shows:
- Almost 34,000 online grooming crimes against children were recorded in the last 6 years
- 6,350 Sexual Communication with a Child offences were recorded last year (2022/23). This is an 82% increase since 2017/18 when this offence came into force.
- More than 5,500 offences were against primary school children, with under-12s being affected by a quarter of cases
- Where the gender was known, 83% of online grooming offences were against girls.
Where the means of communication was known:
- 150 different apps, games and websites were used to groom children online.
- 26% of online grooming offences against children took place on Snapchat.
- 47% of online grooming offences took place on Meta-owned products such as Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp.
The number of offences and children affected by online sexual abuse is likely to be a lot higher than what’s currently known to the police. It’s vital that politicians on all sides support the Online Safety Bill in its final stages, and pass this Bill that will help protect children.
Sophia* was 15 she was groomed on social media by a man pretending to be another child. Sophia, now 19, said:
“He started getting angry if I didn’t reply quick enough or when I wasn’t saying exactly what he wanted to hear. It felt strange, how he was being, so I tried breaking off the conversation with him on Yubo. He just found me on Instagram and moved to messaging me directly there.
“He had started asking for selfies of me, then asking me to take my clothes off and send photos. When he threatened me and started being angry, I was petrified. He used the images to control me. I wasn’t even allowed to use the toilet without his permission.
“I was afraid to tell anyone because of the photos and his threats. He threatened to share the images of me with friends and family he’d found through my social media if I stopped replying.”
The Online Safety Bill
In 2018, the government promised online regulation that will protect children from online sexual abuse. This was following our campaign to help end child abuse online, and we have been campaigning for strong legislation ever since.
We’ve worked with the government, members of parliament, other civil society groups and those who have experienced online sexual abuse, to ensure the Bill effectively tackles the way social media and gaming sites contribute to child sexual abuse.
The Online Safety Bill will mean tech companies have a legal duty of care for children and young people who use their products. They must assess their products for the risk of child abuse and put means in place to protect children.
It will give Ofcom powers to address significant abuse taking place in private messaging and will require tech companies to put safeguards in place to identify and disrupt abuse in end-to-end encrypted environments.
These measures are vital to effectively protect children from online sexual abuse, and our recent YouGov poll shows more than 73% of voters support this legislation.
Online Safety Bill achievements
As well as winning the commitment from the government to legislate child protections online, we have helped shape significant gains for children in the Online Safety Bill as it passes through parliament, including:
- Senior tech bosses will be held criminally liable for significant failures that put children at risk of sexual abuse and other harm.
- Ofcom will produce guidance on tackling Violence Against Women and Girls for companies to follow.
- Companies will have to crack down on ‘breadcrumbing’ and ‘tribute pages’, allow abusers to identify and form networks with eachother to facilitate child sexual abuse.
- Breadcrumbing is where abusers use phrases, keywords, or other hints that signpost to illegal content.
- Tribute pages are fake social media accounts made by abusers, of children who have experienced sexual abuse.
- Websites and companies will have to consider how grooming pathways travel across various social media apps and games, and work together to prevent abuse spreading across different platforms.
We are still waiting for assurance that the Online Safety Bill will effectively regulate AI and immersive technology, and demand an online child safety advocacy body specifically to speak with and for children as part of the regulation. This will help spot emerging risks and fight for the interests and safety of children before abuse occurs.
You can help us end child abuse online
Your MP is your voice in parliament, write to them and tell them why they should act to make the online world safer for children and pass a strong Online Safety Bill in the coming weeks.
Sir Peter Wanless, NSPCC Chief Executive said:
“Today’s research highlights the sheer scale of child abuse happening on social media and the human cost of fundamentally unsafe products.
“The number of offences must serve as a reminder of why the Online Safety Bill is so important and why the ground-breaking protections it will give children are desperately needed.
“We’re pleased the government has listened and strengthened the legislation so companies must tackle how their sites contribute to child sexual abuse in a tough but proportionate way, including in private messaging.
“It’s now up to tech firms, including those highlighted by these stark figures today, to make sure their current sites and future services do not put children at unacceptable risk of abuse.”
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