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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2015 9:32 pm 
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https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... am_WEB.pdf

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2015 10:20 pm 
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‘How Rotherham Council tried to cover up child abuse scandal’


ROTHERHAM Council faces accusations of an abuse cover up in a Government-ordered investigation.

A catalogue of abuse-failings emerging from Rotherham include claims whistle-blowers were made redundant, laptops with abuse data were stolen and staff allowed to leave with severance packages rather than facing disciplinary action.

Louise Casey was asked by Communities Secretary Eric Pickles to inspect the council following the Jay Report last year which found that more than 1,400 children had been subjected to rape, violence and trafficking by gangs of mainly Asian men in the South Yorkshire town between 1997 and 2013.

Today, in her inspection report, Ms Casey said: “This inspection revealed past and present failures to accept, understand and combat the issue of child sexual exploitation, resulting in a lack of support for victims and insufficient action against known perpetrators.”

The report says that when dealing with staff acting inappropriately “severance payments and compromise agreements were too often used, sometimes instead of hearing grievances or disciplinary cases, which was not always appropriate.”

Officials, the report later adds, often chose to “shoot the messenger rather than learn from mistakes that have been made.” It cites the case of a Serious Case review into a child’s death were the council redacted information relating to the child’s links to the local authority.

Those who wanted to speak out on widespread abuse were told not to, the report adds.

“Staff at the council have spoken to Inspectors of being afraid to speak out, told to keep quiet, instructed to cover up, and of a culture where ‘if you want to keep your job, you keep your head down and your mouth shut.’”

Cover-up claims were added to with the revelation that 21 laptops containing abuse information were stolen from council offices in October 2011. There was no sign of a break in and the council did not notify the Information Commissioner’s office.

“The investigation report shows that the matter was discussed with the police and information relating to CSE was present on the laptops, including the names of adults who may have been offenders,” the report says.

http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/mai ... -1-7088847

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2015 10:48 pm 
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4. TAXIS AND CHILD SEXUAL EXPLOITATION

‘[I am working with a girl] she caught a taxi to her boyfriends and she was let off the fare as she didn’t have much money. He took her to McDonalds and bought her food…she realised he was much older, in his late 30s. He took her out to XXX in his taxi – she believes another young woman was locked in a room – he tried to have sex in the car…she has given the details in a statement to the police…...’

‘It’s not safe to use taxis.’

Inspectors were directed to consider whether RMBC, in light of the Jay report which highlighted serious failings in the authority over a number of years with regard to the safeguarding of children, was and continues to be subject to institutionalised political correctness, affecting its decision-making on sensitive issues; to consider whether RMBC undertook and continues to undertake sufficient liaisons with other agencies, particularly the police, local health partners, and the safeguarding board and whether RMBC took and continues to take sufficient steps to ensure only ‘fit and proper persons’ are permitted to hold a taxi licence.

Concern around taxis remains pervasive in the town. Throughout the inspection, individual inspectors frequently heard that people did not feel safe using taxis. The well publicised link between taxis and CSE in Rotherham has and continues to cast a long shadow over the vast majority of law abiding drivers who make their living from the taxi trade. So it is not only to protect potential victims from unscrupulous drivers that RMBC needs to get their house in order and regulate taxis effectively, but also for the drivers who are damned by association.

Professor Jay deemed the prominent role of taxi drivers in CSE as a ‘common thread’ across England and noted that their involvement was evident from an early stage in Rotherham. ‘Residential unit heads met in the 90s to discuss taxis collecting girls, school heads in early 2000s reported taxis picking girls up to provide oral sex in the lunch break’ she said.

The Jay report described how the Safeguarding Unit in the Council convened Strategy meetings from time to time on allegations of CSE involving taxi drivers. She described meeting minutes demonstrating how a single operator was the subject of four meetings in a seven week period, girls having disclosed information in 2010, recording how children were being sexually exploited for free taxi rides and goods and noted three cases of attempted abduction. She also recorded that RMBC had advised that taxi drivers had only been involved in a total of four CSE-related cases (between 2009 and 2012), which had all been dealt with appropriately by the Council’s licensing authority.

Licensing Authority – denial that they knew of a CSE problem

When conducting interviews across the licensing service, Inspectors asked for reflections on the Jay report, on CSE in Rotherham, on work with police and social care and on the awareness of indicators such as Abduction Notices in alerting officials that licensed drivers may have developed inappropriate relationships with underage girls. Inspectors were mindful that Licensing Authorities can suspend/revoke licences on the balance of probabilities and do not need to prove an allegation or complaint beyond reasonable doubt, or await a conviction.

In interview, the Director of Housing and Neighbourhood Services, who is responsible for the licensing service, expressed annoyance at the impact the Jay report had had on the Council and remained adamant that the four CSE-related revocations of licences quoted by Professor Jay represented the full extent of taxi driver involvement in CSE in Rotherham. He said that one of those revocations (in January 2011) had marked his first awareness of CSE as an issue. Since the inspection had been announced, he had reviewed a total of 1400 cases (on all kinds of complaints) and only eight had given cause for concern. He remained confident: ‘our service is compliant with the best in the area’.

Specifically, he stated that the concerns expressed in Strategy meetings about cases from 2010 described by Professor Jay were unfounded. He subsequently established that the information was correct; but intelligence from these meetings or from Responsible Authority meetings had not been fed up to him: ‘I don’t know what I don’t know’. When questioned about systems to ensure the Licensing service was made aware by police of any Abduction Notices issued against drivers, he responded ‘Abduction notices mean no proof’. Lack of ‘proof’ was a continuing theme: “Rotherham is a village, professional gossip becomes fact the question for me is “what is veracity?”’ An officer Less senior staff displayed some ambivalence. Most officers said they would not use a private hire taxi or allow their families to do so. Concerns were also expressed that
children in residential units could be ordering taxis by mobile phone and that care workers could be powerless to stop taxi drivers from either grooming young women or transporting them to be exploited.

However, officers echoed the senior management view that the four cases where drivers had lost licences for CSE-related reasons represented the full extent of proven taxi driver involvement in CSE. Officers repeatedly stressed that if presented with evidence of CSE (preferably by police in the form of a conviction) they would act on it by suspending drivers. They appeared less able to grasp the notion that in the arena of CSE ‘evidence’ rarely appears fully formed and may need to be established by building a composite picture based on different sources of information.


Evidence that the Licensing Authority knew of taxis and CSE as a problem

In trying to assess the level of concern around taxi drivers and CSE and whether the licensing authority at the Council knew about it and responded to that concern, the inspection mainly considered documentary evidence since 2010. All members of the current licensing team were in position at that point.

Inspectors found that the Licensing Manager and the Principal Environmental Health officer had attended a meeting of the Exploitation Steering sub-group in 2010 at which there had been wide-ranging discussions under the agenda heading 'Taxi Licensing and links to Sexual Exploitation'. In November 2010, it was agreed to 'collate a small short task and finish group... in order to investigate allegations that taxi and takeaways were using their position to engage with vulnerable children'. In February 2011, a Safeguarding Manager confirmed a link had been established and that they had attended a meeting with the Assistant Chief Executive where this has been confirmed. One of the recorded actions was to invite Members of the licensing board to a national sexual exploitation conference on the Operation Central lessons learnt, planned for April 2011. The Exploitation sub-group meeting minutes confirm that the Safeguarding Board had concerns in relation to taxis and CSE and that licensing staff were aware of these.

Licensing officers were also invited to attend meetings convened by the Assistant Chief Executive, which from 2010 had considered CSE. Officers told Inspectors they had sought permission from senior management when first approached to attend the meetings. Document bundles provided to the inspection include emails discussing these meetings; senior managers were aware of the Strategy meetings and the issues of CSE and taxis raised there. The service director maintains he was not made aware and Inspectors have seen no evidence to contradict this.

Licensing officers who attended recalled being asked not to take notes and being given scraps of intelligence and asked to check up on it and report back. They ran some information through their systems. Some meetings had been general, others had focused on specific young people at risk.

‘Grid of concerns’

A grid had been produced which itemised issues of concern raised at the meetings.

The grid was later provided to the Inspection team by the Council. It covered Strategy meetings in 2010 and was accompanied by a letter to Inspectors from a Senior Licensing Manager stressing that no officials had attended the meetings in question, but confirming that the Licensing service had been provided with the grid back in December 2010. This would indicate that the specific cases itemised in the grid were known within the licensing authority from that date.


Over ten Strategy meetings were listed throughout 2010. Some were multi-agency.

All the concerns related to named young people, a high proportion of whom were ‘looked after’. There were three or four allegations relating to unidentified vehicles or drivers, or to premises outside Rotherham. Otherwise, most allegations identified specific operators (mainly Operators A, B and C) and in some cases named drivers. Some of the named girls were involved in live police operations then underway, so information came from the police.

Concerns were raised over:

• Taxi drivers harassing or attempting to abduct young people;

• Taxis behaving suspiciously in Clifton Park (a known hotspot for CSE);

• Taxi drivers collecting or dropping off young people from residential homes in a drunken state or in possession of skunk marijuana;

• Young people reporting that they or their friends had performed sex acts in taxis for cigarettes, alcohol or money – or had been asked to do so by taxi drivers; and

• An allegation of rape and serious abuse.

Examples from the grid:

1. Child protection referral on X, by Y at Z residential unit. X’s peers say she is giving out large sums of money, sometimes up to £60 to other young people. She says she is receiving money, cigarettes and alcohol in return for providing sexual acts for drivers from operator C and others. Her parents have also reported an operator B taxi waiting outside the house to collect X more than once.

2. A 12 year old girl, part of a live police investigation disclosed rape and abuse of other young females by X and describes X and his brother as taxi drivers (at Operator B). She has also made allegations against his brother. Operator B taxis have also been seen parked outside her school.

3. Park warden reported two Operator D cabs reported outside Clifton Park museum at 7.30 at night, behaving suspiciously. Registration numbers were taken down and cars checked out as Operator D vehicles.

Setting aside conflicting accounts of whether officials attended any or all of these meetings, the Council’s licensing management have formally stated to the inspection team that the grid of CSE concerns was provided to them in 2010, so the clear tenor and pattern of allegations and the focus on certain operators should have been clear to them.

Responsible Authority Meetings

Responsible Authority (RA) meetings were set up in accordance with the 2003 licensing act as a forum for agencies to discuss matters in relation to licensed premises such as takeaways. The current Rotherham licensing manager chaired these meetings from 2010 and presciently chose to include taxis as a standing item on the agenda. She invited Risky Business to attend to provide intelligence on taxis and licensed premises in regard to CSE. A member of the Safeguarding board also attended most RA meetings as did a police liaison officer.

Concerns raised at RA meetings in 2010 include:

• Reports that operator E cabs are using unlicensed drivers who may be transporting underage girls around.

• Child missing over the weekend, an item of her clothing reported to be left in Operator B’s office (February).

• Concerns raised by a local Councillor and local residents about a taxi transporting girls around the area who then indulge in sexual activity (Aug).

• Concerns about children conducting sexual acts for vodka or food at named shops, takeaways and pubs.

• An allegation made to police by a 13 year old against a named driver.

• A taxi driver taking two ‘looked after’ girls to Sheffield.

• Girls being taken to Clifton Park by taxi drivers again. Abduction Notices served against driver from Operators B and C.

• A missing 14 year old found at premises on Prince of Wales Road where an Abduction Notice had been served on the taxi driver.

Responses to concerns

Inspectors interviewed officers about specific cases discussed at RA meetings and reviewed a selection of incident files. A number of these illustrated issues of concern to inspectors.

• A customer complained that operator E was using a driver whom s/he knew to be unlicensed and a criminal. An enforcement officer opened a complaint, then closed it the following day after calling the operator who claimed the driver was his son and alleged a malicious complaint from his son’s ex-partner and family. No investigation was conducted despite allegations at RA meetings (see above) that the operator’s son could be involved in CSE.

No action was taken for allowing an unlicensed driver to drive a taxi. Five months later a further complaint was received relating to the operator’s son again driving a taxi. The complainant further stated that the son had just come out of prison and that the licensing board had previously rejected his taxi badge application in 2008 and that he had also been disqualified from driving. The operator was said to be allowing three other unlicensed drivers to use his vehicles. The case was closed on the basis of insufficient evidence to continue.

• A social worker reported that Z, an Operator C driver, had turned up at 5am at the house of a vulnerable client with learning difficulties and refused to leave until she had sex with him. After repeated episodes the client feared she had contracted an STD and the driver was now pressuring another vulnerable person. Licensing officers were asked to make interim measures while police were informed, but no action appears to have been taken.

• A mother complained that when her daughter struggled to open a taxi door the driver told her ‘you could have been raped in the time it took you to do that’. The daughter was very upset. The system records the case was closed after the driver said his comments were taken out of context and notes the ‘informant was happy with that’. It is unclear whether the daughter was spoken to.

Interviews conducted by Inspectors about licensing investigations coupled with analysis of documents, demonstrated a failure to follow through concerns and complaints into action. Inspectors were concerned that when an investigation was passed on to the police it no longer appeared as active on the licensing database/system. This means that no record of potentially serious cases could be built up or taken into account if further complaints were made against a driver.

Investigations also appeared to have been halted on the basis of summary assessments of the quality of evidence and whether it would satisfy the CPS.

Moreover, where cases had been referred to the police, no further action by police was used as a basis for closing the case in the licensing team, even though (as has been noted above) licensing can apply lower thresholds of proof.

Officers demonstrated little inclination to take steps to convert anecdote or information into evidence, for example, by working with residential care homes to monitor taxi activities.

One senior manager cited a joint operation between licensing and neighbourhood safety officers to stand up allegations of CSE related activity in Clifton Park as an example of licensing ‘going above and beyond’ in its attempts to gather evidence.

The operation had run for several evenings until 10pm and found nothing. This was unsurprising as officials had held a meeting with the trade to alert them it would be happening.

Inspectors were concerned that on the basis of a single, flawed and short-lived surveillance operation licensing were prepared to give Clifton Park (and the taxis which congregate there) a ‘clean bill of health’ in perpetuity.

Inspectors noted a repeated downplaying of low level harassment claims, ‘her mother said she was probably [edited by admin]’ an enforcement officer commented, of a complaint by a young woman that a taxi driver had put his hand on her leg unbidden.

The young woman herself was not interviewed.

Although Strategy and RA meeting notes repeatedly cited the same few operators in relation to CSE linked issues, when asked if any operators gave particular cause for concern in this regard, officers could not think of any.

The case of Operator B

Concerns were raised about this operator repeatedly in both Strategy and RA meeting minutes. Officers built a case (not based on CSE concerns) against the operator as ‘not a fit and proper person’, which was taken to the Licensing Board, which revoked both of the operator’s licences (for operating and driving).

A magistrate’s court dismissed the operator’s appeal against the revocations.

However, in advance of a further Crown Court hearing RMBC accepted a deal whereby the operator relinquished his operator’s licence, but kept his driver’s ‘badge’.

Shortly afterwards a family member of his applied for an operator’s licence, which was granted and the operator continued trading under a new name. Officials continue to deal with the original operator on licensing matters. In effect the operator carried on under a new guise in full knowledge of the licensing team.

Revocations and current practice

Inspectors noted that only one of the four case studies handed over by RMBC showing revocations of licence (between 2009 and 2012) arose out of the investigation of a complaint. A mother complained after a driver followed her daughter home. Inspectors heard that the board initially refused to hear the case (because the daughter didn’t attend herself) and refused to keep the driver and complainant separate when the hearing took place. Three others followed notification from police of arrests so they acted upon that notification.

Inspectors were also concerned at officers’ attitude towards limousines. Limousines with over eight seats come under the jurisdiction of VOSA, not the licensing authority, but CSE related concerns had been raised at both Strategy meetings and RA meetings about one particular company. The Licensing Authority expressed disquiet that Children’s Safeguarding had written to schools in advance of the prom season, advising parents that there had been CSE related concerns about limos.

This was seen as irregular and not based on ‘fact’, rather than an attempt to prevent a serious issue falling through a gap in RMBC’s jurisdiction.

Inspectors noted that RA meetings are now chaired by a senior manager from the licensing section, who will exert ‘tighter control’ of the discussion and minutes.

Inspectors also witnessed a discussion at a CSE tactical meeting in November 2014 during which a senior licensing manager challenged whether taxis and takeaways in Rotherham should be included as possible areas where CSE may be occurring. Both the Chair of the meeting and the CSE coordinator pointed out that taxi and takeaways were identified as a risk nationally and there had been a historic link with CSE in Rotherham. The senior manager did not accept that there was a current problem with CSE and taxis and takeaways. Inspectors are concerned that the services' refusal to accept a link with CSE is hampering its ability to take effective action, investigate complaints properly, share intelligence appropriately or contribute to building a composite picture enabling others to take action.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 04, 2015 11:53 pm 
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Inspectors also witnessed a discussion at a CSE tactical meeting in November 2014 during which a senior licensing manager challenged whether taxis and takeaways in Rotherham should be included as possible areas where CSE may be occurring. Both the Chair of the meeting and the CSE coordinator pointed out that taxi and takeaways were identified as a risk nationally and there had been a historic link with CSE in Rotherham. The senior manager did not accept that there was a current problem with CSE and taxis and takeaways. Inspectors are concerned that the services' refusal to accept a link with CSE is hampering its ability to take effective action, investigate complaints properly, share intelligence appropriately or contribute to building a composite picture enabling others to take action.


Denial in despite of all ](*,)

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PostPosted: Thu Feb 05, 2015 6:02 am 
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captain cab wrote:
Quote:
Inspectors also witnessed a discussion at a CSE tactical meeting in November 2014 during which a senior licensing manager challenged whether taxis and takeaways in Rotherham should be included as possible areas where CSE may be occurring. Both the Chair of the meeting and the CSE coordinator pointed out that taxi and takeaways were identified as a risk nationally and there had been a historic link with CSE in Rotherham. The senior manager did not accept that there was a current problem with CSE and taxis and takeaways. Inspectors are concerned that the services' refusal to accept a link with CSE is hampering its ability to take effective action, investigate complaints properly, share intelligence appropriately or contribute to building a composite picture enabling others to take action.


Denial in despite of all ](*,)



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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 2:06 pm 
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Breaking: Rotherham sex abuse scandal policeman killed


A serving police officer at the centre of an undercover probe into the Rotherham child sex abuse scandal has died after being hit by a car, The Star can exclusively reveal.

PC Hassan Ali had been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission after it was alleged he twice asked a Rotherham sexual exploitation victim out on a date.

After a lengthy investigation over a number of months, The Star discovered four complaints were made against PC Ali to South Yorkshire Police by two members of the public.

The Star agreed to hold off on exposing his alleged involvement in the scandal after police advised us they were mounting an operation to monitor the officer.

But today it has emerged PC Ali has died in a road crash.

The PC, aged 44, was left fighting for life after being struck by a car on Staniforth Road, Darnall, Sheffield.

He was crossing the street at around 10.15pm last Wednesday when he was involved in the collision.

He died in hospital this morning, with relatives at his bedside.

Chief Constable David Crompton, of South Yorkshire Police, said: “All of our thoughts are with Hassan’s family and on behalf of the force I would like to offer my sincere condolences at this incredibly difficult time.

“PC Ali was a well-liked officer whose colleagues are devastated by what has happened.”

PC Ali was a neighbourhood policing officer based in Rotherham.

The Star understands had been placed on ‘restricted duties’, while the IPCC assessed whether to launch a full investigation into him.

One of the complainants, who is now an adult, said PC Ali had first asked her out when she was 17 and then did so again four years later when she was 21.

The woman said the officer had been involved with her case and was aware she had been a victim of sustained abuse between the ages of 14 and 17.

At the time he first asked her on a date, she had a one-year-old son, who had been born after she was made pregnant by her abuser when she was 15.

The woman said the officer’s behaviour had been ‘inappropriate and totally unprofessional’.

She said she told the police of his approaches in August 2013 when she gave a statement about the abuse she had suffered - but she claimed nothing was done to investigate her claims.

She said she had seen the officer in his police uniform and on duty a few months ago.

South Yorkshire Police last month confirmed an officer had been referred to the IPCC.

A spokesman said: “South Yorkshire Police has received four public complaints relating to alleged misconduct of one of our officers.

“The complaints were made by two separate people about the officer, a PC based in the Rotherham area.

“The force has referred the matter to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.”

The woman said she had asked the officer when she was a teenager to provide her with a picture of her son’s father for his nursery.

“He said I will get you a picture but you are not to tell anyone because I could lose my job,” she said.

“He said he had to go into files that he wasn’t authorised to go into. Then he fetched me the picture to my mum and dad’s house. He came in and my mum made him a drink.

“I walked out with him and he asked me out on a date.

“A few years after he asked me out again.”

She said she had said no on both occasions.

“It was inappropriate. He was a police officer who knew that I was being abused. It is totally unprofessional.”

The nature of the other complaints made against him are not known.

http://www.thestar.co.uk/news/local/bre ... 1-7093216#

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 2:15 pm 
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1400 rapes. No outrage

Farage turns up. Outrage


seems to me the moral compass of the protestors is so far scr*wed up - its surprising they found the offices

Farage forced to abandon Rotherham event amid protests

Nigel Farage has abandoned a public appearance in Rotherham because of protests outside his party's office.

The UKIP leader was due to cut a ribbon at the office of election candidate Jane Collins but his team said he was not coming out on police advice.

About 40 protesters gathered outside the office, shouting that the Ukip leader was not welcome in the town.

Mr Farage accused trade unions of funding "undemocratic and anti-British" protests "to stop UKIP speaking".

But local Labour MP Sarah Champion likened the UKIP leader to a "voyeuristic tourist", who she claimed was trying to win votes in Rotherham by "rubbernecking" at victims. She tweeted that it was "hilarious" that he had been trapped in the party's office by protesters.

Mr Farage's visit was supposed to draw attention to UKIP's challenge to Labour in May's general election and comes two days after a withering report into the way Labour-run Rotherham Council failed to deal with child sexual exploitation in the town.

'Someone to hate'

Mr Farage is currently holed up inside the office giving interviews and is unlikely to come out "until the hubbub had died down", the BBC has been told.

The UKIP leader told BBC Look North's political editor Len Tingle that "a bit more co-operation from the police might be nice".

UKIP said in a statement that the protesters were not "the real people of Rotherham" and accused Labour of "running scared and trying to shut down any voice of opposition".

But Ms Champion, the MP for Rotherham who was elected in a by-election in 2012, said she was "disgusted" by Mr Farage's attempt to "score political points" and the focus should be on victims.

She told the BBC's Daily Politics: "It is like some sort of voyeuristic tourism that is going on... The fact he came here with his circus and has ended up barricaded in his shop with people in Rotherham saying 'we don't want you coming and trying to get elected on the back of the abuse that has been going on in our town'... I do find that funny.

"Because the people of Rotherham do know what is right and wrong."

'Badly wrong'

Mr Farage said he had run the gauntlet of similar protests across the UK, suggesting demonstrators "needed someone to hate" now that the BNP has faded as a political force.

He suggested the Socialist Workers Party had teamed up with "Green types" and a number of former Labour councillors to disrupt Friday's event, saying "bracketing UKIP with BNP and the EDL and other extremist groups is frankly ridiculous".

Mr Farage said "something had gone badly wrong" in Rotherham, saying the scandal had its roots in a policy of multiculturalism that had "divided not united" the country.

Labour-led Rotherham council has been accused of wholesale failings in child protection after an inquiry last year found that 1,400 children were abused by gangs of men, mainly of Pakistani origin, from 1997 to 2013, in the town.

The Labour leader of Rotherham Council and several members of his cabinet resigned en masse on Wednesday after a government-commissioned probe found the council was not "fit for purpose" and external administrators should be sent in to take it over.

'Horrible abuse'

Mr Farage suggested the situation in the town was a product of deeper social problems, where different groups had been afforded different treatment under the law.

"For 40 years or so as a country we have pushed a policy of multiculturalism in that we actually encouraged communities to be divided," he told BBC Radio Sheffield.

"And then we have seen a collective blind eye being turned to horrible abuse for fear of being thought to be racist.

"We have to stand up, much more firmly, for the concept that I want to promote - which is intra-culturalism. We respect there are different languages and different cultures but we have to live together under one rule of law."

'Big target'

Change was needed to ensure "everyone was treated equally under the law and the police and social services and everybody else were told not to bend the rules and shape the law for different communities".

Mr Farage claimed such cultural problems were not just confined to Rotherham.

Prime Minister David Cameron has said there was evidence of "mismanagement, political correctness, bullying, sexism" at the council and that all councillors should have to stand for re-election in 2016.

But Mr Farage said an all-seats election should be brought forward to 7 May, when a third of councillors are due to be elected anyway.

"Re-elect the lot on 7 May and give people the opportunity to say something. I don't see why the people of Rotherham should not have the opportunity to have their say."

UKIP is already the official opposition on Rotherham Council, having won nine seats at last year's council elections.

Mr Farage said Rotherham was now a "very big target" for his party in May's general election and rejected suggestions he was using the scandal for his own's political benefit.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-31163189

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 2:46 pm 
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What do we want?

Spelling Lessons!

When do we want them?

Nwo!

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 2:54 pm 
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captain cab wrote:
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What do we want?

Spelling Lessons!

When do we want them?

Nwo!



UAF??


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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 3:00 pm 
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Nidge2 wrote:

UAF??


The highly dangerous illiterate wing :lol:

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 3:14 pm 
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Wonder what this MP's views on free speech were after the Charlie Hebdo massacre?

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 8:19 pm 
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PC Hassan Ali had been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission after it was alleged he twice asked a Rotherham sexual exploitation victim out on a date.

I struggle for words. :sad:

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 06, 2015 8:49 pm 
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Sussex wrote:
captain cab wrote:
PC Hassan Ali had been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission after it was alleged he twice asked a Rotherham sexual exploitation victim out on a date.

I struggle for words. :sad:

At least he did ask. :wink:

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PostPosted: Sat Feb 07, 2015 1:02 pm 
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captain cab wrote:
Image

Wonder what this MP's views on free speech were after the Charlie Hebdo massacre?



the MP deleted that tweet :lol:

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PostPosted: Sat Feb 07, 2015 1:03 pm 
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