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1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary) 11.40 - 12.00: Break 12.00 – 13.00: Sector sessions 13.00 – 14.00: Lunch and networking (prayer space available) 14.00 – 14.15: Prevent practical perspective (plenary) 14.15 – 15.15: Sector sessions 15.15 – 15.30: Q & A and close (plenary)

1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

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Page 1: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

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Agenda10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee

10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary)

10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions

11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

11.40 - 12.00: Break

12.00 – 13.00: Sector sessions

13.00 – 14.00: Lunch and networking (prayer space available)

14.00 – 14.15: Prevent practical perspective (plenary)

14.15 – 15.15: Sector sessions

15.15 – 15.30: Q & A and close (plenary)

Page 2: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

Prevent duty awareness event.

6 July, Portsmouth Guildhall

Sarah Benioff, Director of Integration and Community Rights, DCLG

OFFICIAL

Page 3: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

The terrorist threat to the UK

• Prevent addresses all forms of terrorism (e.g. XRW, Islamist).

• The terrorist threat level is ‘ severe’ – meaning that an attack in this country is ‘highly likely;’

• But the threats we face have changed: ISIL is much larger and better resourced than AQ and is trying to create and establish a state;

• Unlike AQ, ISIL is also trying to radicalise large numbers of people here and in other western countries and has attracted far more foreign fighters and supporters; social media propaganda is intense;

• Foreign fighters and supporters are encouraged either to travel or to conduct simple but effective terrorist attacks here and against our overseas interests, as we’ve seen recently in Tunisia;

• In recent polling 10% of UK Muslims polled (aged 18-34) were sympathetic to people leaving to ‘join fighters in Syria’.

OFFICIAL

Page 4: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

The Counter Terrorism and Security Act 2015

OFFICIAL

Powers in the Act deal with multiple aspects of the terrorist threat from Syria/Iraq:

o Support people at risk of being drawn into radicalisation: the Prevent duty and Channel.

o Disrupt travel to and from Syria and Iraq: new police powers to temporarily seize a passport at the border

o Manage travel back from theatre: Temporary Exclusion Orders (with Prevent related function), enhanced border controls through better processing of API/PNR and no fly system.

o Deal with people in the UK who pose a terrorism threat: enhanced Terrorism Prevention and Investigation; IP resolution.

Page 5: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

Prevent Strategy

Prevent Strategy (2011) is part of our counter terrorism strategy, CONTEST. Its aim – “to stop people becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism” through:

• Countering ideology: taking down harmful internet content; supporting organisations to develop effective responses;

• Supporting individuals who are at risk of radicalisation notably (but not only) through Channel;

• Working with sectors and institutions where there are risks of radicalisation and opportunities for countering radicalisation: education, health, local authorities, policing, prisons, charities, faith based organisations etc.

OFFICIAL

Page 6: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

Prevent duty: first principles

OFFICIAL

“Specified authorities must, in the exercise of their functions, have due regard to the need to prevent terrorism. “

The duty puts Prevent on a statutory footing. The Prevent duty is about:

• safeguarding those who are vulnerable and at risk of being drawn into terrorism.

• Working in partnership across a range of agencies (local authorities, schools, FE, HE, health, prisons and probation and the police)

• Ensuring a broadly consistent and common geographical and sector based approach to Prevent.

• Tackling risk proportionately to risk: due regard means ‘authorities should place... appropriate weight to the need to prevent people being drawn into terrorism’.

Page 7: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

Prevent duty: key themes

OFFICIAL

There are five key themes throughout the guidance to the duty which apply across all sectors:

•Understand risks (and risks of what)

•Ensure effective leadership

•Understand and use the Prevent partnerships we/you have created

•Develop capability/knowledge and use the capabilities we have developed already

•Within existing legislation establish appropriate information sharing arrangements.

Page 8: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

Prevent duty: implementation by sector

OFFICIAL

• Local authorities should ensure that publicly-owned premises are not used to disseminate extremist views.

• Higher education institutions should have policies and procedures in place for the management of events on university premises that apply to all staff, students and visitors.

• Further education providers should have policies in place relating to the use of IT on their premises.

• Schools should make sure they have training to give them the knowledge to identify children at risk of being drawn into terrorism, and know how to refer for further help.

• The health sector should ensure that training is provided to frontline staff to ensure that they are aware of and can locate appropriate support for them.

• Prisons should offer support to an individual vulnerable to radicalisation. Those who are at risk of radicalising others should face the removal of privileges and segregation from others.

• Police should support individuals vulnerable to radicalisation, for example through the Channel programme, and support partner organisations to deliver Prevent work.

Page 9: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

What we know about the radicalisation process

• Several factors acting together create the conditions for involvement in terrorism

• Individuals can have background factors that make them vulnerable to involvement in terrorist activities

• Several types of influence that can help push an individual towards a terrorism

• To become involved individuals need to be receptive to its ideological message

• It is in the absence protective factors that background, influences and ideological opening can combine into a ‘perfect storm’

OFFICIAL

Page 10: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

What you do when you identify someone at risk of radicalisation

OFFICIAL

• The CTS Act places Channel on to a statutory footing.

• Local authorities are now required to have in place a panel to assess the extent of vulnerability of identified individuals to being drawn into terrorism, and to:

o Prepare a support plano Make arrangement for support to be provided (if consent is given)o Keep the plan under review, and revise if necessaryo Carry out further assessments of vulnerabilityo Refer the individual to other health or social care support if necessary

• As well as providing an opportunity for individuals to receive statutory support they may be entitled to, Channel also provides theological or ideological mentoring.

Page 11: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

Prevent duty: a national offer

OFFICIAL

• Funding allocation: funding for 46 Prevent priority areas, and other local authorities will receive £10,000 each to support implementation of the duty.

• Training and guidance: Guidance and bespoke training for strategic leaders in all specified authorities will be delivered as part of a national rolling programme.

• Practitioner support: A practitioner support group will be set up to provide advice to specified authorities in meeting their obligations under the duty.

• Prevent co-ordinator network: local authority co-ordinators in 46 priority areas, 10 regional HE/ FE, 7 Health co-ordinators and 7 Prevent Schools Officers.

• Innovation fund: A project innovation fund will be set up encourage areas to propose initiatives to tackle the threat in their areas.

Page 12: 1 Agenda 10.00 – 10.20: Registration and coffee 10.20 – 10.25: Opening remarks (plenary) 10.25– 11.25: Sector sessions 11.25 –11.40: Opening remarks (plenary)

Prevent: conclusions

OFFICIAL

• ISIL makes Prevent increasingly important….

• …particularly Prevent work with young people

• The Prevent duty provisions are based on the existing Prevent strategy;

• Many organisations are already meeting the requirement and ‘have a clear understanding of their Prevent related responsibilities’

• The duty should be applied proportionately to risk