Specialist teams and online investigators deployed across England and Wales to tackle 'national emergency' of violence against women and girls

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said her measures mean "abusers will have nowhere to hide" but the Conservatives claimed Labour had "failed women" and "broken its promises".

File pic: iStock
Image: File pic: iStock
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Specialist investigation teams for rape and sexual offences are to be created across England and Wales as the home secretary declares violence against women and girls a "national emergency".

Shabana Mahmood said the dedicated units will be in place across every force by 2029 as part of Labour's violence against women and girls (VAWG) strategy due to be launched later this week.

The use of Domestic Abuse Protection Orders (DAPOs), which had been trialled in several areas, will also be rolled out across England and Wales. They are designed to target abusers by imposing curfews, electronic tags and exclusion zones.

The orders cover all forms of domestic abuse, including economic abuse, coercive and controlling behaviour, stalking and 'honour'-based abuse. Breaching the terms can carry a prison term of up to five years.

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Nearly £2m will also be spent funding a network of officers to target offenders operating within the online space.

Teams will use covert and intelligence techniques to tackle violence against women and girls via apps and websites.

A similar undercover network funded by the Home Office to examine child sexual abuse has arrested over 1,700 perpetrators.

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Abuse is 'national emergency'

Challenged on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips on the amount of funding and whether it could be effective, Ms Mahmood said it would be a "pilot scheme for 18 months" because "we've never gone into the online space looking at violence against women and girls".

"We'll be setting out more of our proposals on those specifics later in the coming week," she said.

"But I think it is important that the state take some action because, you know, we're not willing to sit back and just accept that violence against women and girls is a fact of life.

"And I think for too long across society, it's just something that we expect is just something that's normal. And we're calling time on that."

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The target to halve violence against women and girls in a decade is a Labour manifesto pledge.

The government said the measures build on existing policy, including facial recognition technology to identify offenders, improving protections for stalking victims, making strangulation a criminal offence and establishing domestic abuse specialists in 999 control rooms.

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Ms Mahmood went on to say there was a "postcode lottery" for victims and survivors in terms of what response they receive if they lodge an allegation.

"We want to turn that around," she said. "That's why we think it has to be a national programme of making sure that these teams are rolled out across the country."

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Labour has 'failed women'

But the Conservatives said Labour had "failed women" and "broken its promises" by delaying the publication of the violence against women and girls strategy.

Shadow home secretary Chris Philp said that Labour "shrinks from uncomfortable truths, voting against tougher sentences and presiding over falling sex-offender convictions. At every turn, Labour has failed women".