Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Does anybody else hear a man shouting very aggressively - telling somebody to fk off and fk you etc etc. at same time can hear a kid screaming. This happens every night around 1030. The gardens. I can't work out where it comes from and if I could, I think I'd need to report it as it certainly sounds as though it's this guys reaction to a crying baby.


I hoping nothing serious but been going for over a week now...


Thanks

KalamityKel Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I'd suggest contacting the police first BEFORE

> involving anything to do with child protection as

> you don't know what the situation is.

> Let the Police look into it.



If someone is shouting like that and there are clearly distressed children then it is regular emotional abuse. So please call the police or the NSPCC but do something. This does not mean the the children will be taken necessarily away but it means that the family can be helped.

Does anybody else hear a man shouting very aggressively - telling somebody to fk off and fk you etc etc. at same time can hear a kid screaming.


A 'screaming man' (presumbably disturbed) was reported in the vicinity some time back; see Help-ma-Boab's link above. The sequencing here is quite important - if the man is shouting first, and the child screaming after, this may be a child's response to a disturbed person - clearly upsetting, but a different order of threat to a man shouting at a screaming child. Either which way, alerting the police to the incident may allow a helpful intervention based on what is happening, rather than a knee-jerk 'child protection' response.


Children living in families with someone who is disturbed may very well not be at risk, indeed with many types of illness it is the person who is ill who is at most risk, possibly from self-harming.

clockworkorange Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Is there an alternative number?


I hope this helps:

"101 is the number to call when you want to contact your local police in England, Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland - when it's less urgent than a 999 cal"

Hi there. I work as a social worker in child protection with a local authority. We see these kind of issues all the time and our usual advice is to phone the police immediately to inform them of your concerns. NSPCC do not have any investigative duties and will just pass the information on to us. The LA is then left with information that cannot be acted upon. If police were called "in the moment" we would have more information about what is actually happening rather than information shared after the fact. This is especially important if there is a child at risk. Police will take any necessary immediate action to protect the child. Social services receive a report from them within 24hrs and can initiate safeguarding procedures if necessary. Hope this helps!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Yes but what's the answer, Jazzer? No government can simply walk in and fix the economy - get the bills down, grow it and reduce debt. There is no silver bullet. The public (and the press) wants everything now, everything cheaper, but with better public services and lower taxes.  In the radio and paper, all you ever hear is pundits, MPs, think tanks and economists saying what won't work, but no one seems to know what will work.  I'm genuinely interested to hear what other views people have on here, and what they think will help, or make things worse. 
    • While they struggle with economics of UK plc, collectively we all suffer as a result of their ineptitude. 
    • I’ve tried to find details of surgeries being held before but not found any. The section of the Southwark website that details councillors’ surgeries says that: Your locally elected Councillors will be holding a roving surgery programme in the Dulwich Hill area to enable residents to raise any local issues. Residents will be notified by letter in advance of the date, time and specific streets/roads where the surgery will take place.  Surgeries are not held in August, on Bank Holidays, Easter or in Christmas Week.  Dulwich Hill Ward Councillors I’ve never seen any notification of surgeries being held, including on the DH councillors’ social media accounts. I don’t know if any other residents of Dulwich Hill have? Neighbouring wards all seem to have times and places posted for surgeries.   
    • I wouldn't feel too bad about that. It's one of the few degree areas that you can do a BA or a BSc in, so it's a fairly wide-ranging and complex subject. Certainly Truss, Kwasi and Reeves seem to struggle with it.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...