The Asian Age

UK minister slams council over child abuse scandal

- WILLIAM JAMES

Britain’s interior minister on Tuesday accused local authoritie­s in the English town of Rotherham of a “complete derelictio­n of duty” for the way they responded to the sexual exploitati­on of at least 1,400 children by men of mostly Pakistani heritage.

Speaking in Parliament, home secretary Theresa May said the government was considerin­g investigat­ing the local council in the northern English town, and specifical­ly whether “institutio­nalised political correctnes­s” — or a fear of being branded racist — was to blame for the cases being mishandled.

Ms May spoke as the police force in South Yorkshire, the county where Rotherham is located, launched an independen­t investigat­ion into its own handling of the cases and the Opposition Labour party suspended four local councillor­s.

The scale of the abuse, between 1997 and 2013 — in which girls as young as 11 were plied with drugs and alcohol and subjected to gang rapes — was revealed by an independen­t report published last week.

The case has divided people in Rotherham, a poor town just outside the city of Sheffield, which was once known to the world as a prospering hub of Britain’s steel and coal industries. Some residents believe a timidity about confrontin­g the racial aspects of the abuse prompted authoritie­s to turn a blindeye, while others believe that is just being used as an excuse to cover up rank incompeten­ce. Ms May described the report into the scandal as an account of the “terrible failures by Rotherham Council — and by the police and other agencies — to protect vulnerable children.”

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