Western Mail

Racism fears ‘stopping reports of child abuse’

- Richard Wheeler newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PEOPLE are not raising potential cases of child abuse as they fear being labelled racist, according to a Labour frontbench­er.

Shadow women and equalities secretary Sarah Champion said there is a need to acknowledg­e the “majority of perpetrato­rs have been BritishPak­istani” in the English towns and cities where grooming gangs have targeted girls.

The Labour MP for Rotherham, who called for more government research, added that the lack of action is because people are “more afraid to be called a racist than they are afraid to be wrong about calling out child abuse”.

Former Crown Prosecutio­n Service chief Lord Macdonald of River Glaven also admitted cases of Asian grooming gangs targeting white girls were not previously examined as “rigorously as they might have been”.

He believes this is no longer the case, with recent successful prosecutio­ns showing the “so-called taboos” no longer exist, and called on all communitie­s to recognise it is a “profoundly racist crime”.

The remarks emerged after 18 people were convicted of or admitted offences in a series of trials related to child sexual exploitati­on in Newcastle.

Newcastle joins a growing list of English towns and cities where sex rings have been exposed, including in Rotherham and Rochdale.

Ms Champion told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We’ve got now hundreds of men, Pakistani men, who have been convicted of this crime – why are we not commission­ing research to see what’s going on and how we need to change what’s going on so it never happens again?”

The MP said every time she speaks about the issue, the level of Islamophob­ia increases, adding: “The far right will attack me for not doing enough, the floppy left will have a go at me for being a racist.

“But this isn’t racist, this is child protection and we need to be grownup about this and deal with it.”

Ms Champion said the prosecutio­ns and conviction­s of grooming gangs are “predominan­tly Pakistani men”, adding: “If it was people from a particular town that was doing this crime across the country, if it was people from – I don’t know – a motorbike gang doing this, we’d recognise that as an indicator and we’d deal with it – but we’re just not dealing with it.”

Asked why, Ms Champion said: “I genuinely think it’s because people are more afraid to be called a racist than they are afraid to be wrong about calling out child abuse.

“I know in Rotherham I’ve met frontline social workers who, when – we’re talking 10 years ago – they were trying to report this crime, were sent on race relations courses, they were told they were going to have disciplina­ry action if they didn’t remove the fact they were identifyin­g the person as a Pakistani male.

“This is still going on in our towns now, I know it’s still going on but we’re still not addressing it.”

Lord Macdonald, an ex-director of public prosecutio­ns, told the same programme: “I think there has been in the past a reluctance to investigat­e a category of crime that people might believe attaches to a particular community in circumstan­ces where men may be targeting young women...”

Presenter John Humphrys, intervenin­g, said: “In other words, we’re talking about – by and large – Muslim men who have been targeting white girls?”

Lord Macdonald said: “Yes, exactly.”

Mr Humphrys added: “In other words, we’ve allowed political correctnes­s – if that’s the expression – to interfere with the course of justice?”

Lord Macdonald replied: “I think that’s no longer the case and I think the fact that these sorts of cases are now being brought successful­ly demonstrat­es that those sorts of socalled taboos no longer exist – but I don’t think any of us can pretend that in the past these cases have been examined as rigorously as they might have been.”

He added that he hopes this has changed.

 ??  ?? > ‘The far right will attack me for not doing enough, the floppy left will have a go at me for being a racist’ – Shadow women and equalities secretary Sarah Champion
> ‘The far right will attack me for not doing enough, the floppy left will have a go at me for being a racist’ – Shadow women and equalities secretary Sarah Champion

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