Students were given spoons as part of the educational programme. Pic: Co-operative Academy of Leeds
A secondary school has been encouraging students to hide spoons in their underwear if they are threatened with a forced marriage.
The Co-operative Academy of Leeds has been working with Karma Nirvana, a human rights charity which runs a telephone helpline for victims of forced marriages and honour-based abuse.
Students were given spoons in educational sessions at the school, and were told to conceal the cutlery if they feared they were being taken overseas to be married.
The spoons would trigger airport metal detectors meaning the child would be taken to one side to be searched away from their parent or guardian.
This would allow the youngster to tell airport staff that they were being forced into a marriage.
Will Bose, vice chair of Karma Nirvana, says the charity’s helpline has taken nearly 70,000 calls in a decade.
The charity, which started 25 years ago, has been working with the Co-operative Academy for about five years.
Mr Bose said: “They are a shining example of how schools should be dealing with this issue of forced marriages.
“They engage with the pupils and help to educate them about how to be aware of this problem and how to get help if they are affected.
“We regularly go in and give presentations to students and teachers.”
“We will give one to roughly 320 students in the auditorium, and then across the next couple of days give two more to around the same amount.
“So by that time we have shared the information with more than 1,000 students.”
Sky News has contacted Leeds Co-operative to ask about their involvement in the work.
They are one of many schools that Karma Nirvana works with nationwide, and their headteacher is a patron of the charity.
Forced marriages involving students tend to take place in the summer holidays when schools don’t have as much, if any, contact with pupils.
Mr Bose said Karma Nirvana started working with a specific project in schools in 2014, but prior to this they ran ad hoc workshops.
They first gave out the spoons advice in 2011 when a 16-year-old girl called from a major UK airport.
She told the operator she was going to be taken to Pakistan to be forced into a marriage.
The helpline worker then told her to go to a restaurant and hide a spoon that would set off the airport metal detectors.
Government figures show that the Home Office’s forced marriage unit gave advice and support in relation to 1,195 possible forced marriages in 2017.
Of those cases, 355 involved victims below the age of 18, while 353 cases were linked to victims aged between 18 and 25.
The unit has dealt with between 1,200 and 1,400 cases each year since 2012.