Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

‘How is the death of a child not enough? Cameras in nurseries is only way to prevent this from happening again’

Genevieve Meehan, known as Gigi, suffocated to death after being placed face down on a bean bag for over an hour

PM responds to call for mandatory CCTV in UK nurseries

The morning of 9 May 2022 had started like any other for Katie Wheeler, by dropping off her nine-month-old daughter Genevieve at nursery and telling her: “I love you sweetie.”

Despite thinking she would be in a protected environment, Genevieve, known as Gigi to her loved ones, would be found unresponsive hours later. Nursery worker Kate Roughley had swaddled Gigi so tightly that she had been unable to move, and had placed her face down on a bean bag, leaving her to suffocate over a period of 90 minutes at Tiny Toes in Cheadle Hulme, Stockport.

Distressing audio footage was later played in court which showed Roughley telling Gigi to “stop crying” and pulling a blanket over her head, at one point telling a colleague: “If you keep yourself busy, you can’t hear her crying.”

Roughley would be jailed for 14 years after being convicted of manslaughter, and the nursery was closed down. For Gigi’s mother, Ms Wheeler, and father, John Meehan, their grief at losing their giggly and mischievous daughter would quickly turn to horror as they realised how little regulation was in place for nurseries, with many operating without CCTV and without any guidelines on safe sleep practices.

Figures obtained by the BBC last year showed that there were almost 20,000 reports of serious childcare incidents in England’s nurseries between 2019 and 2024.

It is not only Gigi’s death that has brought the issue of early years safeguarding into the headlines. Nathan Bennett was found guilty on Monday of sexually abusing five boys aged between two and three at a nursery in Bristol.

Prolific sex offender Vincent Chan is also due to be jailed on Thursday for molesting girls aged three and four while working at the Bright Horizons nursery in West Hampstead, with 46 families affected by his abuse. This included abusing children during naptime, downloading thousands of indecent images of children and filming toddlers in distress.

Katie Wheeler: ‘If Gigi had the chance to grow up and be in this world, she would want to protect others’
Katie Wheeler: ‘If Gigi had the chance to grow up and be in this world, she would want to protect others’ (Supplied)

Ms Wheeler told The Independent: “You assume it’s a heavily regulated industry with all the safety measures in place. I worried about choking incidents, but never did I think Gigi was at risk of being harmed. You take it for granted. You think that your child is going to be safe.

“John and I had conversations when she started and I said, ‘What if they’re not nice to her?’ and he said, ‘Of course they’ll be nice to her.’ You think you’re being ridiculous. To find out everything we did during the trial was unbelievably horrifying and so shocking.”

While CCTV had been present in Gigi’s nursery, there had been incidents where 16 children had been placed in the care of one staff member, and her parents were unaware that recent complaints had been made about the nursery. Speaking to The Independent, Ms Wheeler said that they were “shocked” to discover that the conditions inside Tiny Toes, and that Ofsted reports were only undertaken every few years.

They are now calling for compulsory CCTV, for unannounced inspections to be carried out by Ofsted, and for mandatory training and statutory safe sleep guidance to be given to all nursery staff.

Gigi playing with her father John Meehan shortly before she was killed
Gigi playing with her father John Meehan shortly before she was killed (Supplied)

“We didn’t know Gigi had fought for her life and it took 90 minutes for her to die. You cannot fathom it,” Ms Wheeler said. “How that can possibly happen in this country I will never understand. When that happened to Gigi, why wasn’t action taken? How is the death of a child not enough?”

Following Chan’s guilty pleas, a local child safeguarding practice review was commissioned in December by education secretary Bridget Phillipson to “learn every lesson”, while education minister Olivia Bailey told the Commons that the government is “considering the mandatory use of CCTV in early years settings”.

During Wednesday’s Prime Minister’s Questions, Liberal Democrat MP Munira Wilson joined the calls for CCTV and a childcare register, with Sir Keir Starmer stating: “These are harrowing cases for everyone in the country. The safety of children is, of course, paramount, and we are acting to keep them safe. We are implementing all the proposals consulted on to strengthen safeguarding as part of our early years foundation framework.”

He added they were considering the introduction of mandatory CCTV within this framework.

Ms Wheeler said she will continue her fight to ensure no other child experiences what hers did.

Gigi’s parents are calling for compulsory CCTV in nurseries and unannounced Ofsted inspections
Gigi’s parents are calling for compulsory CCTV in nurseries and unannounced Ofsted inspections (Supplied)

She told The Independent: “I cannot tell you the pride I have in being Gigi’s mum. I know she is a very kind little girl, and if she had the chance to grow up and be in this world, she would want to protect others. I never wanted it to be my child, but never would I ever want it to be someone else’s child either.

“I have felt so much positivity since starting this campaign. I feel like I’m doing something for her and telling her story. That means more to me than I could possibly put into words.”

Tulip Siddiq, the Labour MP for Hampstead and Highgate, said CCTV was an important step to mitigate against the “safeguarding crisis in our nurseries”.

She said: “There were almost 20,000 reports of serious childcare incidents in English nurseries in the five years to March 2024 – up 40 per cent on the previous five years. Meanwhile, the number of legal claims involving injuries to children in nurseries has increased tenfold over the past decade.

“I’m not naive to the scale of these challenges, and I don’t think CCTV is a silver bullet to solve all violence and assault towards children, but it’s an important step towards safeguarding the most vulnerable people in our society, and one I believe a government with Labour values should be prioritising.”

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in