H
society
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Parents of children taken in to care should get more help, say experts after Victoria Marten death

about 22 hours ago
A picture


Parents whose children are taken into care should receive trauma-informed support to reduce the risk of harm to any further babies they have, according to child protection experts,A national child safeguarding review, launched after the death of baby Victoria Marten, said that if “destructive cycles of harm are to be interrupted” there needed to be more focus on parents, as well as their vulnerable baby or unborn infant,Victoria died in January 2023 after her parents, Constance Marten and her convicted rapist partner, Mark Gordon, took her to live in a tent in wintry conditions to evade social services,The child’s decomposed remains were found by police officers in March that year,The pair, who were jailed last September for 14 years for killing their newborn baby, had fled authorities to prevent Victoria being taken into care, as four older siblings had been previously, their Old Bailey case heard.

A review, published by the national child safeguarding practice review panel, said the baby girl’s birth “was the last within her family of a rapid series of pregnancies, births and removals into care that by the time she was conceived had become a repeating pattern with devastating consequences”,Given this family history, the review said the professionals who dealt with the couple “needed to contemplate the prospect of Victoria being conceived and born well in advance, to have a better chance of engaging more productively with her parents”,Sir David Holmes, the chair of the panel, said: “Whereas the death of baby Victoria wasn’t predictable, her conception arguably was,”Holmes said it was difficult to know whether better professional engagement with baby Victoria’s parents would have prevented her death, but added: “There needs to be better engagement with families where there are risks of children being removed, so that we can try and interrupt the repeating cycle of children being removed and then another baby born and then that child being removed,”The review noted that no one agency or professional had specific responsibility for supporting the couple when their children were removed, “or helping them process their likely sense of loss and grief”.

It added that the “successive removal” of their children “may have reinforced their perception of harm caused by children’s social care, making the concealment of Victoria feel subjectively ‘rational’.”The review noted the couple’s “persistent reluctance to engage” with authorities, having moved five times during their five pregnancies between 2017 and 2023, “with each move coinciding with escalating safeguarding concerns”.The absence of coordinated support for the couple after their children were taken into care left them “isolated and unsupported, increasing the risk to their children,” the review said.It acknowledged the complex challenges faced by safeguarding professionals dealing with troubled families, noting that domestic abuse, Gordon’s rape conviction and her parents’ unwillingness to engage with authorities as they moved around the country were all factors in Victoria’s death.Holmes said while it was valid to remove children from their parents in order to protect them, removal did not address the root of troubled families’ problems.

He added: “It does not prevent the same set of circumstances from happening again.Indeed, it may increase the risk of harm for the next child, not yet born, not yet even conceived.”There were 5,360 under-ones who were subject to child protection plans (CPPs) in England on 31 March 2025, according to the latest statistics published by the Department for Education.Of these, 3,930 were babies under one year old and 1,430 were unborn infants.The panel recommended national guidance on safeguarding and child protection for babies, covering concealed pregnancy and pre-birth planning for unborn infants when there are child protection risks.

It also called on the government to require registered sex offenders to inform the police of the name of new partners and if they or their partner was due to give birth,Holmes said a failure to notify the police of these life changes could result in an offender being imprisoned,Marten and Gordon were found guilty in July 2025 of baby Victoria’s manslaughter, child cruelty, concealing the birth of a child and perverting the course of justice after two trials,
politicsSee all
A picture

Jeane Freeman obituary

Jeane Freeman, who has died aged 72, held two critical roles in the SNP government at Holyrood, leading the Scottish government’s response to the Covid pandemic alongside Nicola Sturgeon and establishing Scotland’s first devolved social security system.By no means a career politician but an instinctive campaigner from the outset, she entered elected politics a decade ago, and relatively late in life, after a varied career in nursing, criminal justice and the civil service. This followed a political journey from her family’s working-class, trade-unionist roots to the progressive nationalism of the 2014 independence referendum campaign, during which she championed women’s voices and famously took on the broadcaster Andrew Neil in a viral interview about whether the union benefited Scotland’s NHS.Freeman co-founded the cross-party group Women for Independence in 2012, determined to push women’s experience to the heart of the debate that was gripping the country. Her rubric was “there’s no such thing as a stupid question”

about 4 hours ago
A picture

‘Jellyfish’ and ‘doormat’: why is Keir Starmer so deeply unpopular?

In yet another confusing and chaotic period for British politics there is one thing on which just about everyone can agree: Keir Starmer is unpopular. Very, very unpopular.His net favourability rating, the difference between those who have a generally positive or negative view of the prime minister has been, depending on the pollster, anything from -50 to -57, a nadir only beaten by Liz Truss. Recent focus group descriptions of Starmer include a “jellyfish” and a “doormat”.Perhaps most strikingly, the slightly plaintive chant of “Keir Starmer’s a wanker” to the inevitable tune of Seven Nation Army has been heard not just at football stadiums but January’s world darts championship

about 7 hours ago
A picture

Vetting process for Mandelson needed more awkward questions, expert says

Downing Street cannot appoint politicians or business figures to senior diplomatic posts using the same security vetting it uses to check civil servants, a former national security adviser has said.Peter Ricketts said there had to be more “awkward questions” asked of a person such as Peter Mandelson than the system allows, given “all the baggage” of his three decades in politics and business.“For that person there must surely be an even more thorough process including detailed interviews with those who have known him/her well in their previous life. That will take time,” Lord Ricketts said.Other insiders familiar with the appointment process said Mandelson’s appointment was streamlined and the reality was that Downing Street “wanted Peter to be the answer”, with informal concerns brushed off

about 16 hours ago
A picture

Former top civil servant warns ‘more due diligence’ to be done over replacement of Chris Wormald

A former top civil servant has urged No 10 to do “more due diligence” as it prepares to replace the cabinet secretary, Chris Wormald, with Antonia Romeo, the frontrunner for the role.Sir Simon McDonald, the former permanent secretary of the Foreign Office, said he had tried to warn No 10 the process needed to start from scratch and it was vital that the prime minister followed a thorough procedure given the importance of the role.He told Channel 4 News: “The due diligence needs to be thorough. If the candidate mentioned in the media is the one, in my view, the due diligence has some way still to go.”No 10 was preparing to confirm earlier on Wednesday that Wormald would depart his job as cabinet secretary after just a year in the job – but the announcement was delayed

about 23 hours ago
A picture

Labour bill would stop ‘dodgy front companies’ making political donations

Labour will end the use of “dodgy front companies” that hide the source of dark money for political donations as part of its sweeping elections bill, which will give votes to 16-year-olds and pave the way for “opt-out” voter registration.Gifts and hospitality for politicians sponsored by foreign states or companies will also be severely curbed, the Guardian understands.The government also intends to put new restrictions on cryptocurrency donations and the size of foreign donations, a key concern of Labour MPs about money that may be funnelled to Reform UK.Elon Musk, the billionaire X owner, was once reported to have been interested in a multimillion pound donation to Nigel Farage’s party, though later said he had failed to be impressed by the Reform UK leader.The communities secretary Steve Reed told the Guardian the bill introduced to the Commons on Thursday would be “the biggest reset to our democratic system since the second world war”, adding potentially millions to the electoral roll and introducing tough new laws to stop foreign donations being hidden in shell companies

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Aide linked to sex offender ‘did not give full account’ before he was given peerage, PM says

Keir Starmer’s former communications chief Matthew Doyle “did not give a full account of his actions” before being nominated for a peerage, the prime minister has told the Commons after it emerged Doyle had campaigned for a friend charged with possessing indecent images of children.Doyle, a longstanding Starmer aide who stepped down as the No 10 head of communications last March, was suspended on Monday from the Labour whip in his new role in the Lords after reports about his actions.In the first prime minister’s questions since Starmer faced a near-rebellion from his MPs over his decision to appoint Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington, Kemi Badenoch largely ignored the internal Labour dissent.Instead, the Conservative leader pressed the PM on the resignation over the weekend of Morgan McSweeney, his chief of staff, the expected departure of Chris Wormald, the cabinet secretary, and the peerage for Doyle.After Doyle was named as one of a tranche of new Labour peers in December, media reports set out that in 2016 he campaigned in a local election on behalf of Sean Morton, a former Labour councillor in Scotland who had been charged with possessing indecent images

1 day ago
sportSee all
A picture

Heraskevych’s ‘helmet of memory’ forces IOC into PR fiasco at Winter Olympics | Sean Ingle

about 4 hours ago
A picture

‘It’s emptiness’: banned Ukrainian athlete accuses IOC of fuelling Russia’s propaganda

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Move over Pommel Horse Guy: USA’s Curling Rambo becomes cult hero of Winter Olympics

about 5 hours ago
A picture

‘If they’re a chef short, I’ll fill that role’: Safyaan Sharif ready to cook up T20 World Cup shock

about 6 hours ago
A picture

Olympic champion Breezy Johnson crashes out of super-G then gets engaged at end of course

about 7 hours ago
A picture

Victoria and WA shook the foundations as Origin hit a peak that it will never reach again | Brendan Foster

about 8 hours ago