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Labour has come under fire after refusing to hold a public inquiry into historic sexual abuse by grooming gangs in Oldham.

(566 Posts)
FriedGreenTomatoes2 Thu 02-Jan-25 13:35:45

Scandalous I think.
I’m with Elon Musk on this re his comments to Jess Phillips.

Elon Musk attacked the decision as “disgraceful” and Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, said a full national inquiry into rape gangs was “long overdue”.

Jess Phillips, Labour’s safeguarding minister, insisted it was “for Oldham council alone”.

Really Jess?

Iam64 Sat 11-Jan-25 21:08:21

What kind of meeting was this Whingey? It has no resemblance to any social work meeting I’ve ever known

M0nica Sat 11-Jan-25 23:17:58

So much publicity is being given to these dreadful cases, but none to the equally dreadful massacre of boy children and young men, stabbed to death in gang rivalries.

This week a 14 year old boy was knifed on a London bus. There is already a Drill song online about his death. He had just returned home after 8 years in care, during which he had been drawn ibto garng culture and was already important in his gang hierarchy. Boys like this are stabbed and killed almost daily.

Why are we not kicking a fuss about these boys the way we are concerned about these girls. Why are the police not blitzing and breaking up these gangs, why no one standing up and demanding to know how a young boy could be recruited and involved with gangs, even while he is in Local Authority care.

It seems to me that we have two levels of concern. One for girls and none for boys.

Mollygo Sat 11-Jan-25 23:46:38

I don’t think the publicity and demand for action about grooming girls in Rochdale or anywhere else means there are two levels of concern.
They are two separate issues.
This thread is about the grooming of girls.

The question raised by M0nica
Why are we not kicking a fuss about these boys . . . is warranted in so far as no one on GN has, to my knowledge started a thread about that.
So does the lack of threads mean GN’s don’t care about the boys?

Whingey Sun 12-Jan-25 08:30:11

My social work troubles kicked off when my 13 year old boy was lied to by paedophile teacher and forced to strip off in front of doctor and 2 social workers. He was told he missed an injection! Line manager at first meeting said we will deal with the 2 social workers by letter leading to a pack of lies. Children have to be stripped off to see if they have other injuries but there was only the doctor present. Told him to check CC TV and lying sod said they were not working that day

Iam64 Sun 12-Jan-25 09:00:25

MOnica - you’re correct, boys at risk are not currently getting the media attention given to the ‘girls’ in the grooming/torture/rape gangs.

We seem to have moved as a society from blaming these girls as complicit in their abuse. The smaller number of boys who were abused in the same way are rarely mentioned.

We seem still to blame boys in the same age group who are groomed in similar ways, towards a career as a gangster. As with the organised child sexual exploitation gangs, the organised crime gangs who groomed primary school aged boys to deliver drugs/money on bicycles were well established before those in authority saw the problem.

As with the girls under discussion in these threads, the children were usually from homes that left them vulnerable. They were encouraged to misbehave or refuse school with the inevitable exclusion or pupil referral unit heading their way.

Maybe this deserves its own thread though the common link is the deliberate exploitation of vulnerable children

M0nica Sun 12-Jan-25 12:07:07

I have started that thread.

Whingey Sun 12-Jan-25 12:51:10

Children's homes have attracted pedophiles and drug dealers for decades. Margaret Hodge pretended she never knew about Islington in 1970s .If she had gone to prison the message would have gone out that it was not on and it would have stopped. Have the people who worked in the kids home been punished?

eazybee Sun 12-Jan-25 13:35:04

They were following the rules. It is the rules which need changing, not prosecuting people for not reporting abuse. Most people do; it stops further up the chain of command. That is why Oldham called for a public enquiry; they cannot subpoena people to attend.

Wyllow3 Sun 12-Jan-25 14:15:06

I'm still unclear what the demands for a new National Inquiry hope to achieve.

Is it to go through all the cases in every single area in order to try and find specific names of people to prosecute (as opposed to already uncovered systemic failings especially before it was taken really properly and seriously).

I dont disagree in theory that people who really fell short,

ie acting deliberately as opposed to inadequately, should be held to account legally, but surely the process would involve hundreds perhaps thousands of interviews of people working to who did work on all the agencies at different times.
Certainly take away these people from current case work, and certainly take years and possibly another billion pounds as did the 2022 inquiry.

This is the original 2019 Oldham report, and the one where failings from before 2015 are very clearly identified in great detail - systemic failures plus limited named individuals

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-61863603

What more is required?

Mollygo Sun 12-Jan-25 14:24:16

What more is required?
Action!
Further investigations would enable positive actions to be deferred even longer.

Maremia Sun 12-Jan-25 15:00:17

Wyllow3, do you think the new bill, where professionals have to report suspected abuse, and will be sanctioned in some way if they don't, do you see this being an effective step in the right direction?

Wyllow3 Sun 12-Jan-25 15:09:10

Maremia

Wyllow3, do you think the new bill, where professionals have to report suspected abuse, and will be sanctioned in some way if they don't, do you see this being an effective step in the right direction?

I would hope so but I think what would make the greatest difference would be to increase resources for professionals tackling the crimes.

I agree Mollygo I think let's get on with it.

(My long post was just pushing to find out/query/point out issues as to why people are still demanding "more" inquiries)

Maremia Sun 12-Jan-25 16:13:01

Thanks Wyllow3, I thought that too.

Iam64 Sun 12-Jan-25 17:01:29

I’m in favour of mandatory reporting of suspected abuse. That changes the culture but it doesn’t magic up police/social workers to investigate.
We need to invest in our children as well as support their parents. Sure Start type family centres will help, as will the money and training being invested in putting mental health practitioners in schools.
We need multi agency teams involved in the investigations and ongoing support. Working Together, Blair’s first ‘orange book’ set out basic expectations. Looking at some recent examples of poor practice in a number of agencies we need to go back to basics

Wyllow3 Mon 13-Jan-25 00:02:12

We have to be prepared to pay for it.

I've just found a brilliant u tube interview 4 days ago with Andrew Marr and Ian Hislop which discusses Musk, his recent intervention and choice of topic, the lifting of safety controls on x and other platforms, and the difficulties for people to get real news.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=diHcpZvBjT0