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State failure in Southport child-killer case ‘frankly leaps off page’ – Starmer

The Prime Minister delivered an address to the nation on Tuesday morning.

By contributor By Eleanor Barlow, Josh Payne, David Hughes and Margaret Davis, PA
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Sir Keir Starmer
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer delivers a statement at 10 Downing Street (Henry Nicholls/PA)

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said the failure of state institutions in the case of child-killer Axel Rudakubana “frankly leaps off the page”.

The 18-year-old pleaded guilty on Monday to murdering three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, Merseyside, in July.

Despite contact with state agencies such as Prevent, aimed at countering terrorism, authorities failed to stop the attack which claimed the lives of Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven.

Axel Rudakubana court case
Axel Rudakubana pleaded guilty on Monday (Merseyside Police/PA)

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper announced an inquiry into the case on Monday evening, saying the country needs “independent answers” on Prevent and other agencies’ contact with the “extremely violent” Rudakubana and “how he came to be so dangerous”.

Addressing the nation on Tuesday, Sir Keir said: “As part of the inquiry launched by the Home Secretary yesterday, I will not let any institution of the state deflect from their failure – failure which in this case, frankly, leaps off the page.

“For example, the perpetrator was referred to the Prevent programme on three separate occasions – in 2019 once and in 2021 twice.

“Yet, on each of these occasions, a judgment was made that he did not meet the threshold for intervention – a judgment that was clearly wrong and which failed those families. And I acknowledge that here today.”

The PM added that the Southport killings “must be a line in the sand for Britain”.

Elsie Dot Stancombe funeral
Flowers and tributes outside the Atkinson Art Centre in Southport for the three girls who died in Axel Rudakubana’s knife attack in Southport (Paul Currie/PA)

Sir Keir said the murders showed “terrorism has changed”, with “acts of extreme violence carried out by loners, misfits, young men in their bedrooms”, and he will change the law if necessary to tackle the “new and dangerous” threat.

He said: “The predominant threat was highly organised groups with clear political intent – groups like al Qaida.

“That threat, of course, remains, but now, alongside that, we also see acts of extreme violence perpetrated by loners, misfits, young men in their bedroom accessing all manner of material online – desperate for notoriety, sometimes inspired by traditional terrorist groups, but fixated on that extreme violence, seemingly for its own sake.”

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