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19
Nov 2021
Three parents have called for Harrogate Army Foundation College to be closed after claiming their children were abused.
Alison Blackwell, Charlotte Poad and another parent, known only as Kevin, expressed their concerns to the Child Rights International Network, which is a think tank that focuses on the human rights of young people.
The college on Penny Pot Lane, which provides basic training for the British Army for 16 and 17-year-olds, was recently rated 'outstanding' by Ofsted.
CRIN sent an open letter to Ofsted yesterday questioning its rating and claiming the college is unsafe. The letter says:
The letter adds the army’s Joint Personnel Administration system had recorded 60 formal alleged incidents of violence against recruits aged under 18 by members of college staff since 2014, including assault and battery, and that 10 of the allegations were made since Ofsted’s inspection in 2017.
It also raises concerns about the college's "very high attrition rate", saying 30 percent of recruits aged under 18
drop out before they complete their training and that recruits have no legal right to leave during the first six weeks.
It claims the college operates daily use of physical and psychological stressors, such as the interruption of sleep and privacy and the use of humiliation to induce obedience.
Kevin, the father of a recruit who joined the college in 2015 said:
An instructor at the college was demoted at a court martial last week after being convicted of punching two teenage soldiers. Cpl Kimberley Hey was acquitted of six other charges of battery relating to three other soldiers. The court heard she told recruits, “you’re mine now, bitches” and punched teenage soldiers.
Last month's Ofsted report praised the college for its “very good training .. immaculate facilities”.
It also gave positive feedback on its safeguarding saying the college investigated incidents throughly and made necessary improvements.
A new Commanding Officer was employed in July 2020, Lt Col Simon Farebrother MC, with a new vision for the college.
The report added his ethos of “emotional and psychological safety, inclusion and teamwork is firmly embedded” within the college.
Lt Col Farebrother said at the time:
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