Revealed:
<
style="font-family: arial mt black;">The hijab-wearing 17-yr-old
Muslim girl hired as a
community police officer>
Nadia Naeem (pictured right) has been
recruited as a Police Community Support Officer
A Muslim
teenager has been named as one of the 'babies on the beat' as police
community support officers.
The Daily
Mail revealed on Monday how Thames Valley police were employing two
16-year-old schoolleavers as PCSOs.
Yesterday it
emerged that the force also recruited three 17-year-olds, including
Nadia Naeem, now 18, who wears the hijab.
All now have
the power to detain and question suspects.
The Police
Federation representing rank-and-file officers claims the teenagers,
who are still legally children, will lack the maturity and life
experience necessary to do a dangerous job.
It says PCSOs
are recruited as cheap replacements for mainstream officers.
But Thames
Valley police insist the teenagers have the necessary skills.
A spokesman
said that "if you are good enough, you are old enough". Miss Naeem,
from Bicester, Oxfordshire,
joined the
force - which covers Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Buckinghamshire - in
February.
She patrols
the town's East Neighbourhood zone along with four other PCSOs.
She is
expected to issue penalty notices, pull over vehicles and carry out
'stop and search' procedures under terror laws.
At the time
she was recruited, aged 17, she would have had the power to seize
alcohol from anyone in the street despite being too young to drink
herself.
According to
one resident in her home town, she used to work in the local Tesco.
Community
support officers were introduced in 2003 by then Home Secretary David
Blunkett as a means of providing an extra reassuring presence on the
street.
'Blunkett's
Bobbies' have only a fraction of the training given to mainstream
colleagues - an initial five-week course compared to 19 for regular
police officers.
The teenage
PCSOs have now been dubbed Blunkett's Babies.
Police
Federation spokesman Metin Enver yesterday called for a minimum
recruitment age for the civilian officers of 18, the same as for
regular police officers.
He said:
"What we are seeing in Thames Valley is chief officers and chief
constables looking at ways to save money.
"By replacing
sworn police officers with PCSOs we are not getting the level of
maturity and expertise which local people-will quite rightly want and
deserve.
"If someone
does not have the level of expertise or maturity, especially in
confrontational or aggressive situations, not only are they putting
themselves at risk, but other members of public in danger."
A spokesman
for Thames Valley Police refused to reveal who the other four young
recruits are.
"We do not
want to personalise this and turn the matter into a focus on these
young people's competency to do the job," the spokesman said.
The
16-year-old boys work in Reading, Berkshire. It is believed the other
two 17-year-olds are based in Oxfordshire.
Thames Valley
PCSOs earn £17,000 £20,000, depending on their work hours.
A full PC starts at £21,000, rising to £33,000.
At least five
other forces are known to employ PCSOs under 18, or have admitted doing
so in the past.