Britain backs new local inquiries into child sexual abuse
17/1/2025 6:13
Britain will back new local
inquiries into child sexual abuse across the country, the
government said on Thursday, after weeks of criticism by U.S.
billionaire Elon Musk stirred renewed concern about a
decades-old scandal over grooming gangs.
The scandal involved organised groups in English towns and
cities raping and sexually exploiting vulnerable young girls,
since at least the 1980s to the 2010s. The cases prompted a
number of local investigations and a broader nationwide public
inquiry into child sexual abuse.
Musk, a close ally of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, has
accused British authorities of not doing enough. His criticisms
have focused on Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer, although
Labour was not in power for some of the period in question, and
have been the latest in his attacks on Starmer since the prime
minister took office last July.
Interior minister Yvette Cooper said the government would
set out a timetable before Easter to implement the 20
recommendations of a national inquiry published in 2022 but
would also go further and back new local investigations.
"Despite all those national inquiries, reports and
hundreds of recommendations, far too little action has been
taken, and shamefully little progress has been made," Cooper
told parliament.
She stopped short of announcing a new national public
inquiry into the scandal, which Musk and the opposition
Conservative Party have called for.
"This is a step in the right direction, but the results will
speak for themselves," Musk wrote on X, reposting a government
announcement on the new measures.
The Conservatives were in power from 2010-2024. In targeting
Starmer, Musk has said he failed to tackle the crisis when he
was chief prosecutor from 2008-2013 and has called him
"complicit in the rape of Britain".
Starmer has strongly defended his record, saying he had
overcome resistance to tackling the scandal by reopening cases.
In a number of past cases the perpetrators of the sexual
grooming and abuse were predominantly of Pakistani heritage. A
2014 report criticised police and local authorities for failing
to take action due to concerns over appearing racist.
Britain's police chief for child protection, Becky Riggs,
has said that while recent media attention has focused on
perpetrators of Pakistani heritage, group-based child abuse
occurs across ethnicities.
In addition to backing local reviews, Cooper said she had
asked Louise Casey, a former senior official who has led
previous high-profile reviews, to undertake a "rapid audit" of
the current scale and nature of gang-based exploitation in
Britain.
Critics have accused Musk of meddling in European politics.
In recent months he has called for Starmer to be replaced,
labelled German Chancellor Olaf Scholz an "incompetent fool" and
urged a vote for the far-right Alternative for Germany in
February's election there.
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