Children as young as ten are getting hooked on a ‘pick and mix of horror’ online which is placing them on a ‘conveyor belt’ to terrorism, national terror boss warns

Children as young as ten are getting hooked on a ‘pick and mix of horror’ online which is placing them on a ‘conveyor belt’ to terrorism, a top officer warned yesterday.

Vicki Evans, senior national co-ordinator for counter terrorism policing, said officers were seeing a ‘rapidly increasing fascination with extreme violence’ among schoolchildren who are searching out horrific violence, ‘gore’, extreme pornography, and racism online.

The Metropolitan Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner warned youngsters were being drawn to terrorism after watching ‘grotesque’ videos of school massacres and were ending up ‘shopping, picking between (terrorist) ideologies’, with officers finding ‘staggering’ internet search histories for ones so young.

Speaking for the first time since taking up the role earlier this year, Ms Evans said: ‘What is new and becoming far more common and more prevalent is this rapidly increasing fascination with extreme violence and extreme content that we’re seeing throughout our case work.

‘The type of material that we’re encountering, and my officers and staff are encountering in casework, is absolutely staggering and horrific.

‘So we are seeing search histories which contain violence, misogyny, gore, extreme pornography, racism, fascination with mass violence, school massacres, incel.

‘Sometimes that’s coupled with terrorist material, sometimes it’s not. But what it absolutely is a pick and mix of horror.

‘I can genuinely say I wouldn’t wish the search histories that we see in some of our cases on anyone. 

Vicki Evans (pictured), senior national co-ordinator for counter terrorism policing, said officers were seeing a ‘rapidly increasing fascination with extreme violence’ among schoolchildren

Children aged 11-15 now make up the largest proportion of referrals to the Government’s de-radicalisation Prevent programme (file image)

‘These sort of grotesque fascinations with violence and harmful views that we’re seeing are increasingly common.’

She added: ‘We most definitely need to think differently about how we stop that conveyor belt of young people who are seeing and being exposed to this type of material, and unfortunately, sometimes then going on to commit horrific acts.’

Police arrested a record number of children, some as young as 12, for terrorism offences last year.

Children aged 11-15 now make up the largest proportion of referrals to the Government’s de-radicalisation Prevent programme.

Of the 6,884 referrals made to Prevent in the year to March, 40 per cent (2,729 referrals) were aged 11-15, and hundreds of youngsters under the age of 10 were also referred.

Overall, police and security services have stopped 43 late-stage terror plots since 2017, including two Islamist and one extreme right-wing plot in the last 12 months which would have resulted in mass casualties.

Some were ‘goal line saves’, Ms Evans said.

She described the terror threat as ‘smouldering’, adding: ‘We have some really deep, dark hot spots, some pockets where we cannot leave the activity and the groups unattended, and we need to continue to maintain our focus on them to keep the threat at bay.’

Police arrested a record number of children, some as young as 12, for terrorism offences last year (File image)

One of the major concerns is that recent turmoil in Syria could ‘create a space for extremism and acts of terror’ in the UK.

Ms Evans said: ‘In light of events in Syria, I can absolutely confirm that we’re proactively reviewing our casework, proactively identifying whether there are any new risks in our system that have been inspired or committed by the events.’

She warned that expressing support for HTS, the group that has taken control of the country, would be considered a crime because it has banned as a terrorist organisation in the UK.

Counter terrorism police has seen the caseload linked to hostile state activity rise fivefold in the last few years, she added.

Read More

  • Related Posts

    The cost of getting Nato ‘war-ready’: Map shows much more states could have to pay to hit alliance’s new 3.5% target

    By JAMES TAPSFIELD, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE Published: 06:33 EDT, 5 June 2025 | Updated: 06:36 EDT, 5 June 2025 The scale of extra spending being demanded of Nato countries…

    At least five children killed in blast in southwest Yemen

    The blast occurred on Friday night in Taiz city which has been a battleground in Yemen’s civil war. At least five children in southwestern Yemen have died after an explosive…

    You Missed

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney