Police beef up child safety teams after horrific star murder


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Police in West Yorkshire have beefed up their safeguarding team after the horrific murders of children Star Hobson and Arthur Labinjo-Hughes Deputy Mayor of West Yorkshire for Policing and


Crime, Alison Lowe, said almost 80 people had been added to the force’s safeguarding team following the deaths of Keighley one-year-old Star Hobson and six-year-old Arthur Labinjo-Hughes,


who lived in the West Midlands. Both youngsters died at the hands of their carers in 2020. Ms Lowe told a health and wellbeing board she and Mayor of West Yorkshire, Tracy Brabin, with the


Mayoralty having taken on police and crime commissioner powers, want to ensure police and partners are embedding the recommendations of reports after the two cases into their working to


prevent similar tragedies. READ MORE: ROW OVER AIR QUALITY IN VILLAGE WHERE LOCALS CLAIM IT'S HARMING THEIR CHILDREN It was their job to hold the police to account on the issue, she


said. “One of the things Tracy and I have done when we got the learning report for Star Hobson and Arthur Labinjo-Hughes is that we asked the police what their response was, and we have been


reassured that they are really clear about the responsibilities that fall to them as a result of that report, not just in Bradford, but wider,” said Ms Lowe. The review panel made eight


recommendations, among them establishing expert-led, multi-agency child protection units. The report had identified that failings in how agencies worked together meant concerns raised by


wider family members about physical abuse were not properly investigated by police and social workers. Ms Lowe, who was detailing Ms Brabin’s new Police and Crime Plan to members of


Calderdale Health and Well being Board, said she had spoken to police this month about some of the detail of the work they were doing. “They’ve grown their safeguarding team by a further 79


staff and they are really wanting to embed the recommendations, not just the local ones, but also the national ones, and they are working through that with their safeguarding team. It is


work in progress, there’s lots of learning in there for all of us,” she said. Ms Lowe said partnership working was important to preventing incidents like the children’s deaths from


happening. “That partnership is critical because we keep on having these terrible, terrible cases and it appears the lessons are not being learned, and it shames us all. I don’t want my


legacy to be that I presided over a force that failed to listen and failed to learn,” she said. She and the Mayor were acutely aware of the need for the recommended changes to be made and to


hold the police to account in their aspect of it, said Ms Lowe. READ NEXT: