ConflictLaw Enforcer

Pilot of domestic abuse experts helping in 999 call rooms begins in England

 

Jess Phillips says ‘Raneem’s law’ scheme will support ‘force-wide cultural change’ as initial phase is rolled out

 

 

 

The campaigner Nour Norris (center) and Jess Phillips (right) visit the West Midlands police control room in Birmingham. Photograph: Joe Giddens/PA

Domestic abuse specialists embedded in control rooms receiving 999 emergency calls will help “create force-wide cultural change”, said Jess Phillips as the first phase of “Raneem’s law” was rolled out across England. The new law is named in memory of Raneem Oudeh, who was killed alongside her mother, Khaola Saleem, in Solihull by Oudeh’s ex-husband, whom she had reported to the police at least seven times, as well as making four 999 calls on the night she was murdered.

An inquest found police failings “materially contributed” to their deaths.

The new policy, which will involve domestic abuse specialists working in 999 control rooms to give feedback on responses to emergency calls, is being piloted in five police forces, and could be rolled out across the whole of England and Wales by the end of the year.

The pilot is taking place in the Northumbria, Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire and Humberside forces, as well as in the West Midlands, where police handled Oudeh’s case.

Speaking at the launch event at the West Midlands police central operations hub, Nour Norris, Oudeh’s aunt and Saleem’s sister, who has been campaigning for change on their behalf, said: “I felt really overwhelmed because this is where it really took place for my niece. It’s quite emotional being here.

“But this will save people’s lives; it’s as simple as that. There is no underestimating this at all. We can’t do anything to bring them back. But their legacy, Raneem’s legacy, will live for ever. She wasn’t heard when she was alive. But through every victim, she will be heard.”

Norris previously said police showed a “dismissive attitude and a lack of understanding about domestic violence” in their dealings with Oudeh, including telling her to deal with the problem herself.

At the launch, she praised the force for “transforming their failure into something that is hopefully going to be positive”.

Jess Phillips, the minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, and the MP for Birmingham Yardley, said she was “haunted” by Oudeh’s story.

“I live constantly with the feeling that I just wish that she’d called me,” she said. “I wish that I could say that what we are doing here would have changed the outcome for Raneem, but I don’t know. But the haunting of that and the activism of Nour will keep us trying.”

She said having the specialists in control rooms would create “a better service for victims”. “You can already sense a cultural shift in the team, even just the language they use to speak to people,” she said. “I think this has the opportunity to create force-wide cultural change that’s really needed.”

Contributed by the Guardian

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