ASIAN MEN = muslim men
- Report found 1,400 children abused between 1997 and 2013 in Rotherham
- The figure is likely to be a conservative estimate of the true scale
- Victims terrorised with guns and doused in petrol and threatened with fire
- More than a third of the cases were already know to agencies
- Author of the report condemned 'blatant' failings by council's leadership
- Action blocked by political correctness as staff 'feared appearing racist'
- Majority of victims described the perpetrators as 'Asian' men
- Leader of Rotherham Council has stepped down with immediate effect
- No council employees will receive disciplinary action, leaders state
Published:
13:42 GMT, 26 August 2014
|
Updated:
17:28 GMT, 26 August 2014
The
sexual abuse of about 1,400 children at the hands of Asian men went
unreported for 16 years because staff feared they would be seen as
racist, a report said today.
Children
as young as 11 were trafficked, beaten, and raped by large numbers of
men between 1997 and 2013 in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, the council
commissioned review into child protection revealed.
And shockingly, more than a third of the cases were already know to agencies.
But
according to the report's author: 'several staff described their
nervousness about identifying the ethnic origins of perpetrators for
fear of being thought racist'.
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Horrific: A
report has discovered that 1,400 children were sexually exploited in
Rotherham over a 16-year period. Adil Hussain (left) and Razwan Razaq
(right) were jailed in 2010 for grooming young girls in the town
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Gang: Umar Razaq was another of the five-strong sex gang jailed and placed on the sex offenders' register
Professor
Alexis Jay, who wrote the report, condemned the 'blatant' collective
failures by the council's leadership, concluding: 'It is hard to
describe the appalling nature of the abuse that child victims suffered.'
The landmark report which exposed widespread failures of the council, police and social services revealed:
- Victims
were doused in petrol and threatened with being set alight, terrorised
with guns, made to witness brutally-violent rapes and told they would be
the next if they spoke out;
- They
were raped by multiple perpetrators, trafficked to other towns and
cities in the north of England, abducted, beaten and intimidated;
- One victim described gang rape as 'a way of life';
- Police 'regarded many child victims with contempt';
- Some fathers tried to rescue their children from abuse but were arrested themselves;
- The approximate figure of 1,400 abuse victims is likely to be a conservative estimate of the true scale of abuse.
The
lack of reports was partly down to a fear of being racist, Prof Jay
wrote, as the majority of the perpetrators were described as 'Asian
men', and many were said to be of Pakistani origin.
One young person told the inquiry that 'gang rape' was a usual part of growing up in the area of Rotherham where she lived.
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Jailed: Zafran Ramzan, 21, (left) was jailed for nine years and Mohsin Khan (right) for four in the same case
In two
cases, fathers had tracked down their daughters and tried to remove them
from houses where they were being abused - only to be arrested
themselves when police were called to the scene.
And
one child declined her initial offer to give a statement after
allegedly receiving a text from a perpetrator threatening to harm her
younger sister.
The
failures happened despite three reports between 2002 and 2006 'which
could not have been clearer in the description of the situation in
Rotherham'.
Prof Jay said the first of these reports was 'effectively suppressed' because senior officers did not believe the data.
The other two were ignored, the professor said.
Fears had also been raised by schools over the 16 years but the alerts went uninvestigated.
Teachers
reported seeing children as young as 11, 12 and 13 being picked up
outside schools by cars and taxis, given presents and mobile phones and
taken to meet large numbers of unknown men in Rotherham or other local
towns and cities.
The
majority of victims believed the perpetrators to be their boyfriend who
gave them gifts, alcohol and drugs. Some of the victims still maintain
they were not groomed or abused.
Analysing
the case studies, Prof Jay said many of the children came from
dysfunctional families, had parents with addictions, and had suffered
domestic or sexual abuse as a child.
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Condemned: Professor Alexis Jay, author of the report, blasted the 'blatant' failing of Rotherham Council
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Widespread: More than a third of the sexual abuse cases were known to agencies but not followed up
Some had serious mental health problems.
Councillors seemed to dismiss previous reports as a one-off problem which they hoped would go away, according to Prof Jay.
She said: 'Others remembered clear direction from their managers not to do so.'
The
spotlight first fell on Rotherham in 2010 when five men, described by a
judge as 'sexual predators', were given lengthy jail terms after they
were found guilty of grooming teenage girls for sex.
The
five men - Umar Razaq, Adil Hussain, Razwan Razaq, Zafran Ramzan, and
Mohsin Khan - preyed on their victims over several months and threatened
them with violence if they refused their advances.
One of the men branded his victim a ‘white bitch’ when she resisted, while a second smirked: ‘I’ve used you and abused you.'
The
men, all British-born Pakistanis, attacked the four girls in play
areas, parks and in the back of their cars, Sheffield Crown Court heard.
NO COUNCIL EMPLOYEES WILL FACE DISCIPLINARY ACTION OVER ABUSE
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Martin Kimber said no council employees will face disciplinary action following the damning report
No
council employees will face disciplinary action in a town where 1,400
children suffered sexual exploitation in a 16-year period, the local
authority's chief executive has said.
Rotherham
Council leader Roger Stone resigned today following the publication of a
shocking report which detailed gang rapes, grooming, trafficking and
other sexual exploitation on a wide scale in the South Yorkshire town.
But
council chief executive Martin Kimber said he did not have the evidence
to discipline any individuals working for the council despite the
report saying there had been 'blatant' collective failures by its
leadership at the time.
Mr
Kimber said: 'Officers in senior positions responsible for children's
safeguarding services throughout the critical periods when services fell
some way short of today's standards do not work for the council today.
'To
that extent, I have not been able to identify any issues of
professional practice related to current serving officers of this
council that would require me to consider use of disciplinary or
capability procedures.'
Mr
Stone said in a statement: 'Having considered the report, I believe it
is only right that I, as leader, take responsibility on behalf of the
council for the historic failings that are described so clearly in the
report and it is my intention to do so.
'For
this reason, I have today agreed with my Labour group colleagues that I
will be stepping down as leader with immediate effect.'
Professor
Alexis Jay, who wrote the report, said she found examples of 'children
who had been doused in petrol and threatened with being set alight,
threatened with guns, made to witness brutally-violent rapes and
threatened they would be next if they told anyone'.
She
said: 'They were raped by multiple perpetrators, trafficked to other
towns and cities in the north of England, abducted, beaten and
intimidated.'
She said she found that girls as young as 11 had been raped by large numbers of men.
They
gave them gifts and introduced them to their friends. The girls were
abused so frequently that after many months it ‘became a way of life’.
The
girls, who were being monitored by social services, were eventually
rescued by police and removed from their homes amid growing concerns for
their safety.
The leader of Rotherham Council, Roger Stone, has today quit in light of the findings. He has led the council since 2003.
The
current Police Commissioner for South Yorkshire is Shaun Wright, who
was widely criticised for failing to tackle sex abuse in Rotherham
during his five-year stint in the council's children and young people's
department.
From
2005 to 2010, Cllr Wright was in charge of children's services in the
borough and worked closely with Joyce Thacker, who became Director of
Children's Services in 2008.
The
prosecution was the first of a series of high-profile cases in the last
four years that have revealed the exploitation of young girls in towns
and cities including Rochdale, Derby and Oxford.
HORRIFIC
MURDER OF GIRL, 17, KILLED FOR 'BRINGING SHAME' ON TWO PAKISTANI
FAMILIES WHOSE MEN HAD USED HER FOR SEX... AND SOCIAL WORKERS KNEW SHE
WAS AT RISK FROM THE AGE OF 11
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Laura Wilson, 17, was murdered for bringing shame on the families of two Pakistani men who had used her for sex
The spotlight fell on Rotherham in 2010, after Laura Wilson, 17, was murdered for bringing shame on the families of two
Pakistani men who had used her for sex.
It was later revealed that social workers had known for six years that the white teenage mother was at clear risk from predatory
Asian gangs, and had
received information about certain adults suspected of targeting her
from the age of 11.
Laura, 17, had been groomed by a string of British
Pakistanis before she was stabbed and thrown into a canal to die for
informing her abusers' families of the sexual relationships.
Her killer Ashtiaq Asghar, who was 18 at the time,
was given a life sentence and will serve a minimum of 17-and-a-half years after he pleaded guilty to
murdering Laura in October 2010.
In 2012, the council's
Safeguarding Children Board published a serious case review but key
passages which reveal they knew she was at particular risk from 'Asian
men' had been blocked out with black lines.
The
council went to court in an attempt to tried to suppress the hidden
information after a uncensored copy of the report was leaked to the
Times newspaper but they abandoned legal action.
The
uncensored report confirms that Laura, identified as Child S, had
dealings with 15 agencies and identified 'numerous missed opportunities'
to protect her.
It states that she eventually became 'almost invisible' to care professionals.
The hidden information included the knowledge
that at the age of 13 Laura and a friend had been given alcohol by men
at a takeaway who then asked what she would give them in return.
Murder: Laura was stabbed repeatedly by 18-year-old Ashtiaq Asghar before being thrown into this South Yorkshire canal to die
She had also been referred to a child sexual exploitation project just three months after her 11th birthday. Another
censored passage reveals that Laura had been 'mentioned' during a 2009
police inquiry that eventually led to the conviction of five Pakistani
men for sex offences against three underage girls.
While
the published report mentioned the fact that a friend, who Laura knew
when she was 10, was 'thought to have become involved in sexual
exploitation', it concealed the succeeding passage which read: 'with
particular reference to Asian men'.
In
August 2013, four women launched legal action against Rotherham council
over 'systematic failures' to protect them from 'sexual abuse by
predatory men when they were children' according to their lawyers.
One girl, known only as 'Jessica' claims she was abused daily as a 14-year-old by a 24-year-old man after social services failed to accept that she was a victim grooming.
On
one ocassion married father-of-two Arshid Hussain was even caught with
the half naked schoolgirl under his bed but documents revealed that police arrested her - and let him go.
Rotherham,
South Yorkshire, has become known as Britain's under-age sex capital,
after a string of high profile cased where authorities have let down
vulnerable children.
In another shocking case, reported in 2012, a 13-year-old girl told police
how she had been groomed and raped by an Asian sex gang.
She wrote a
harrowing letter to herself at the age of 14 addressed to her alter-ego Michelle, in which she wrote, 'I feel like
the Asians really hate me even when they say they love me'.
The
girl, who told police in 2003 about the rape that took her virginity and the
time five men queued outside a bedroom to demand sex from her, added,
'They took all my dreams and my life away from me.'
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Warnings: The report comes after two others done between 2002 and 2006 which 'could not have been clearer'
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Children as young as 11 were doused in petrol and threatened with fire and told not to speak out in the town
Following
the 2010 case, The Times claimed that details from 200
restricted-access documents showed how police and child protection
agencies in the South Yorkshire town had extensive knowledge of these
activities for a decade, yet a string of offences went unprosecuted.
The allegations led to a range of official investigations, including one by the Home Affairs Select Committee.
Last
year, South Yorkshire police and crime commissioner (PCC) Shaun Wright
said there had been 'a failure of management' at South Yorkshire Police
as he responded to a report into his force on this issue by Her
Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC).
'I
ABHOR THE LIFELONG DAMAGE THAT WAS WREAKED UPON THE LIVES OF ALL THOSE
AFFECTED': STATEMENT FROM ROTHERHAM COUNCIL LEADER ROGER STONE AS HE
STEPS DOWN FOLLOWING DAMNING REPORT
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Resigned: Roger Stone has stepped down with immediate effect following the release of the report
Announcing
his resignation with immediate effect, Roger Stone said: 'Today's
publication of Alexis Jay's inquiry report has highlighted historic
failings by Rotherham Borough Council and its partners in tackling the
scourge that is child sexual exploitation.
'The
Council will now rightly consider the next steps to be taken following
its publication, including ways to build on the significant improvements
put in place in recent years.
'I
join our Chief Executive Martin Kimber and our Cabinet Member Cllr Paul
Lakin in sending my heartfelt apologies to those young people and their
families who this report shows have been badly let down by the Council
in the past.
'Like
any right-minded person, I am disgusted by CSE and abhor the lifelong
damage that it wreaks upon the lives of all those affected by it.
'It
is a matter of great regret for me, as it is for many others, that so
many people have been traumatised by CSE here in Rotherham.
'However,
having considered the report, I believe it is only right that I, as
Leader, take responsibility on behalf of the Council for the historic
failings that are described so clearly in the report and it is my
intention to do so.
'For
this reason, I have today agreed with my Labour Group colleagues that I
will be stepping down as Leader, with immediate effect.
'A new Leader will be elected in due course.
'I
have always considered my most important job as Leader has been to
share my passion for this borough and to work in the best interests of
everyone here in Rotherham.
'I
believe my decision to step down, though not an easy one for me to
make, does exactly that, allowing a new chapter in the history of
Rotherham Borough Council to begin.
'I
would like to take the opportunity to thank all those within the
Council and in our partner organisations who have worked with me over
the past 10 years and I wish them all the very best for the future.'
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