SCOTLAND has become the first UK nation to ban the smacking of children after new legislation came into effect.
Changes to the law giving children the same protection from assault as adults were passed by the Scottish Parliament last year and take effect from today.
Scotland becomes the 58th country to outlaw corporal punishment after the defence of justifiable assault was removed from Scots law.
It is the first part of the UK to do so, with Wales expected to follow suit with the introduction of a ban by 2022.
Scottish Green MSP John Finnie, who introduced the changes, said he hoped the smacking ban would help demonstrate to children that violence is not acceptable.
"I'm delighted that as of Saturday Scotland's children are going to be given equal protection from assault. The same protection as I and every other adult in Scotland enjoys at the moment." - @JohnFinnieHI 💚 pic.twitter.com/0rmtTtT9Lq
— Scottish Greens (@scotgp) November 6, 2020
READ MORE: ‘Momentous day’ as Scottish smacking ban set to come into force
He said: “As I have progressed my campaign over the last four years, it has been noticeable just how many people believed that striking a child was already outlawed.
“I am pleased that this will now be the case.”
Campaign group Be Reasonable Scotland, which opposed the legislation, claimed that “even the mildest physical discipline will be treated as abuse” and could lead to parents being prosecuted.
A spokesman for the group said: “In the years ahead, loving parents who have had no contact with the authorities previously and who present no risk to their children will face stressful intervention, blacklisting on police databases and even criminal records for smacking.
“The majority of Scots see this as an injustice, not a positive change.”
Banning smacking won support from Labour, the LibDems, the SNP and Finnie's own party in Holyrood, as well as several children's charities.
Scotland’s children’s minister Maree Todd (below) said: “I’m very pleased that Scotland has become the first part of the UK to legislate to ensure that children, without exception, have the same protection from assault as adults.
“This outdated defence has no place in a modern Scotland. It can never be reasonable to strike a child.”
Joanna Barrett, NSPCC Scotland policy and public affairs officer, said: “This new law, finally, gives children in Scotland their rightful protection against assault and the same safeguards as adults.
“By making this common-sense move to get rid of the outdated defence of ‘justifiable assault’, we will be joining more than 50 other countries around the world in taking measures to protect the most vulnerable members of society.
“This law sets out in clear terms that physical punishment should no longer be part of childhood in Scotland and it marks a momentous step in making it a country where children’s rights are truly recognised, respected and fulfilled.”
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