Starmer to Launch Statutory National Inquiry into UK Grooming Gangs Scandal
- Sir Keir Starmer has accepted the recommendations from Baroness Louise Casey's audit regarding group-based child sexual abuse.
- Starmer confirmed that the inquiry will be statutory under the Inquiries Act and will take some time to establish.
- The Prime Minister has committed to adopting Baroness Casey's recommendations, having read her independent report on child sexual exploitation.
- Baroness Casey's report links the maltreatment of vulnerable children to unlawful immigration, as reported by the Express.
144 Articles
144 Articles
For over a decade, cases of organised rape of young girls have poisoned the political debate in Britain. Now Keir Starmer wants a national inquiry into the extent of the crime.
Negligencies and serious delays. This is disputed by the investigating authorities, but also British political-administrative, in a report published today on collective sexual abuse for years, around 2000, in the north of England by Asian gangs of paedophiles. Starmer's position is the document, signed by Louise Casey, an expert government official of social affairs and a member of the House of Lords, aggravates the embarrassment of the Labour g…
UK Announces National Inquiry Into Grooming Gangs
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a national inquiry into grooming gangs on Saturday. The grooming gang scandal first gained national attention in Britain in the early 2010s, after revelations that gangs of men, mostly of Pakistani heritage, had targeted vulnerable girls—grooming and raping them—since at least the early 1990s. Over the weekend, Starmer said he would accept a recommendation from an independent reviewer for a judge-led…
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