Shock figures reveal record number of suspected extremists reported to Prevent | Politics | News


A record number of suspected extremists were referred to the Governmentโ€™s Prevent scheme last year, alarming new figures show.

Some 8,778 cases were referred to experts, a 27% increase from 6,922 in 2023/24, according to new data published by the Home Office.

The figures show a shocking rise in young people feared to hold radical views and a sharp increase in people fascinated with extreme violence and mass casualty attacks.

And there was a huge surge in referrals following the Southport atrocity, Home Office figures show.

The Home Office said: “In the period from 29 July 2024 to 31 March 2025, there were 6,350 referrals made to Prevent.

“This represents a large increase of 34% (up from 4,722 referrals) compared to the same period in year ending March 2024 and 37% increase (up from 4,647 referrals) compared with the same period in year ending March 2023.”

More than one in five, 1,798, referred to Prevent were believed to hold extreme right wing ideology โ€“ double the number of cases, 870, linked to Islamist extremist.

The findings will prompt renewed debate over the programmeโ€™s failure to pick up potential jihadists when Islamist terror remains the biggest threat in the UK.

Senior Tory MP and former Home Office adviser Nick Timothy said: “The Director General of MI5 has made clear that Islamist terrorism represents three quarters of his workload.

“Yet under the Prevent programme – supposedly about stopping people becoming terrorists – only ten per cent of referrals are for Islamism. This shows what we already know – Prevent has gone badly wrong and needs to be better targeted.”

The proportion of referrals for extreme right-wing concerns increased year on year slightly, from 19% to 21%, while the proportion for Islamist extremism fell from 13% to 10%.

Of the 8,759 referrals to Prevent where the age of the individual was known, 11 to 15-year-olds accounted for the largest proportion (3,192 or 36%), followed by 16-17-year-olds (1,178, or 13%).

There were 345 referrals (4% of the total) for children aged 10 or under.

Following initial screening and assessment, Prevent referrals who are deemed at risk of radicalisation may be passed to a multi-agency โ€œChannel panelโ€.

Home Office figures show a sharp rise in referrals to Prevent by police.

Chaired by local authorities, these panels determine the extent of a personโ€™s susceptibility to radicalisation and whether a tailored package of support is necessary and proportionate to address the risk.

Of the 8,778 referrals made to Prevent in the year to March 2025, 1,727 individuals were discussed at a Channel panel and 1,472 were adopted as a Channel case.

Individuals aged between 11 and 15 accounted for 39% of all cases adopted as a Channel case.

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