Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Will TV’s warning on sex abuse really be heeded?

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ANYONE who saw the threepart BBC programme Three Girls should be totally shocked, not just because of the inhuman and depraved behaviour of the perpetrato­rs on the poor young girls subjected to their brutality, but how the authoritie­s tried to cover up and not stop what was going on.

Indeed, even sacking eventually the main person who brought the whole sorry state to a head.

This is deplorable and where those in high office from council chief executives to chief constables should have done the decent thing and resigned.

For these people are public servants and empowered to protect the vulnerable in our society. Unfortunat­ely, they failed miserably.

This programme should be a Film crews have rolled into Marsden to film Walk Like a Panther in the Peel Street area. It’s written and directed by Huddersfie­ld-born writer Dan Cadan and stars Stephen Graham (This is England), Stephen Tomkinson (DCI Banks, Brassed Off) and Jason Flemyng (Snatch, SS-GB)

Photo taken by Keith Humphrey warning to all those in high office that if this highly negligent behaviour continues within the UK they too will be found out eventually and quite rightly dragged before the courts for extreme negligence towards the people and society as a whole.

It is also strange that after this major exposure of the system Ruby (Liv Hill), Holly (Molly Windsor), and Amber (Ria Zmitrowicz), in Three Girls, the BBC drama based on the Rochdale abuse scandal screened last week several police forces have now suddenly woken up over the last five years to the great social evil that resides within our communitie­s and are therefore investigat­ing dozens of child abuse case presently.

We shall all have to see if they do their job right this time, as they should have done in the past and where the depraved within our society are put behind bars for many years to come. But that is, of course, if they do their job right from now on and where they seem to have forgotten that they are totally paid by the taxpayer who have been ironically the ones in the past who have suffered from their major negligence towards, in this case, young vulnerable children. IN view of the inadequaci­es reported in the latest CQC inspection I presume the executive directors of Locala will hand back their generous bonuses.

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