Times of Suriname

Rotherham abuse inquiry ‘needs 100 more officers’

-

ENGLAND - The UK’s biggest investigat­ion into child sexual exploitati­on needs 100 more officers to tackle the unpreceden­ted scale of abuse in Rotherham, the head of the operation has told The Guardian.

The National Crime Agency (NCA), which is investigat­ing past grooming offences in the town, has identified more than 1,500 potential victims and 110 suspects, and officers expect those figures to rise.

Paul Williamson, the senior investigat­ing officer on Operation Stovewood, said his team of officers had been able to contact only 17% of the 1,510 possible victims due to a shortage of specially trained detectives. “It’s a really specialist area, engaging and interviewi­ng vulnerable victims,” he said. “A lot of our victims were children when they were abused but they’re now adults and have associated problems as a result of that abuse, including suicidal tendencies, mental health issues, drug and alcohol addiction. “It’s really complex. The progress will necessaril­y be influenced by the number of officers we’ve got on the team and we can see that.” He added: “I’m conscious of demands across law enforcemen­t in the UK at the moment but we have assessed that 200-250 [officers] is the optimum model to actually achieve the task.” There are 144 officers on Operation Stovewood but an applicatio­n was made to increase this to 200-250, which was supported by Her Majesty’s Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry and Fire and Rescue Services.

More than 34 investigat­ions have sprung out of Stovewood since it was launched in 2015, two years after a report by Prof Alexis Jay sparked a national furore when it revealed that 1,400 children were believed to have been sexually exploited by men of mainly Pakistani heritage in Rotherham.

The operation, believed to have cost about £10m to date, has led to four men being convicted and jailed for a total of more than 30 years.

Thirty-eight suspects have been arrested, 18 charged, two cautioned, and six trials are due to take place later this year. The inquiry is 85% funded by the Home Office with the remaining 15% from South Yorkshire police’s budget.

Williamson said the operation was now at a crucial stage when officers were aiming to pursue Rotherham’s grooming gangs instead of lone individual­s. But, he said, the pace of the inquiry was being slowed by the lack of resources.

(The Guardian)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname