Written statement to Parliament

Tackling Extremism in the UK: report from the Prime Minister’s task force on tackling radicalisation and extremism

This written ministerial statement was laid in the House of Commons by Theresa May and in the House of Lords by Lord Taylor of Holbeach.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government
The Rt Hon Theresa May MP

The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Theresa May): The Extremism Task Force was set up in the wake of the killing of Drummer Lee Rigby in Woolwich to look closely at whether the government was doing all it could to confront extremism and radicalisation. It met for the first time on 3 June, following which the Prime Minister gave a statement to the House. On 26 November, the Task Force convened for the final time.

During the last five months, the Task Force has considered a range of measures to confront extremism in all its forms, including in communities, schools, prisons, faith institutions or universities.

We have today published a document that sets out the conclusions of our discussions and the practical steps that we have agreed to address the gaps in our response to extremism.

This includes:

  • placing Prevent and the channel programme, which supports individuals at risk of being radicalised, on a statutory footing;
  • consulting on new legislation to strengthen the powers of the Charity Commission;
  • considering the case for new types of order to ban groups which seek to undermine democracy or use hate speech, and new civil powers to target individual extremists;
  • working with the internet industry to restrict access to terrorist material online, improving the process for public reporting of extremist content online and identifying extremist content to include in family-friendly filters;
  • taking steps to ensure local authorities are supporting people on the front line of tackling extremism, and intervening where they are not taking the problem seriously;
  • giving additional support to local communities which are on the frontline of tackling extremism by supporting integration projects and setting up a dedicated public communications platform; and
  • addressing extremism in institutions by improving oversight of religious supplementary schools, finding trained Muslim chaplains to challenge extremist views on campuses and restricting the ability of extremist and terrorist prisoners to radicalise others.

Copies of the document are available in library of the house and on GOV.UK.

Published 4 December 2013