Taxi Driver Online

UK cab trade debate and advice
It is currently Mon Apr 27, 2026 4:55 am

All times are UTC [ DST ]




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 18 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2
Author Message
PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2015 12:16 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Wed May 23, 2012 7:24 pm
Posts: 6755
Steal money from local councils in the name of Austerity in effect to pay the Tory bankers illegally created debts and guess what local councils slash spending ........which of course includes the departments responsible for protecting these children #-o #-o so it will get worse #-o #-o and surprisingly staff overworked pushed to the limit will leave ............well done Cameron :badgrin: Hard luck children :cry: :cry:

_________________
All posts by this contributor are made in a strictly personal capacity

I AM PROUD TO BE A CITIZEN NOBODY'S SUBJECT http://www.republic.org.u

F88K EM ALL WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND

BOOZE BOOZE BOOZE


Top
 Profile  
 
PostPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2015 4:43 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2011 8:45 am
Posts: 9966
Location: Braintree, Essex.
captain cab wrote:
UK children suffered sex abuse on 'industrial scale'


David Cameron: "End the walk on by culture that too many police forces and social work departments have demonstrated"


Children in the UK have suffered sexual abuse on an "industrial scale" with authorities failing to tackle the problem, David Cameron has said.

Outlining plans to tackle child sexual exploitation, the PM accused people and organisations of "walking on by".

Teachers, councillors and social workers in England and Wales who fail to protect children could face up to five years in jail under the proposals.

And police will now prioritise sexual exploitation as a "national threat".

This means such abuse will be treated in a similar way to serious and organised crime, with police forces, chief constables and police and crime commissioners having a duty to collaborate in order to protect children.

Abused 'over and over'

Mr Cameron, speaking at a summit called to address the issue after child exploitation scandals in Rotherham and Oxfordshire, said: "I think it's very important we take a step back and just recognise the horrific nature of what has happened in our country."

The proposals coincide with the release of a serious case review into abuse of children in Oxfordshire that found as many as 373 children may have been the victims of sexual grooming in the county over the past 16 years.

The investigation followed the prosecution of a sex gang of seven men who abused girls in Oxford between 2004 and 2012 and found that police and the local council made "many errors" in that case.

The new plans, which are going out to consultation, involve making it a criminal offence to wilfully neglect those at risk of, and victims of, child sexual abuse.

Social workers, education practitioners and local councillors would be covered by the sanction, which would be introduced as an extension of the crime of wilful neglect of patients by care workers in this year's Criminal Justice and Courts Act.

A child in Rotherham Police forces will be ordered to treat the issue as a national threat under plans unveiled by David Cameron
The prime minister added: "Young girls - and they are young girls - being abused over and over again on an industrial scale, being raped, being passed from one bunch of perpetrators to another bunch of perpetrators.

"And all the while this has happened with too many organisations and too many people walking on by.

"And we have got to really resolve that this stops here, it doesn't happen again and we recognise abuse for what it is."

Speaking to the BBC, he added that "if professionals fail, there need to be consequences".

The plans were unveiled at a meeting in Downing Street - attended by victims, survivors' groups, ministers, police chiefs, council leaders, child protection experts, and health and social care providers.

The proposals also include:

Unlimited fines for individuals and organisations shown to have let children down

A national helpline being set up to enable professionals to report bad practice

Senior staff who leave councils after abuse councils having pay-offs "clawed back" if it is shown they failed to protect children under their responsibility

Labour has criticised the plans as a "missed opportunity", saying the government is not going far enough.


Analysis: Mark Easton, BBC Home Editor

It is now deemed a national threat akin to terrorism and major civil disorder but the issue of child sexual exploitation was not even a footnote in either the Conservative or Labour manifestos, nor indeed in the coalition agreement, at the last election.

And yet this is hardly a new problem. Experts have been warning for decades that up to a million children in Britain are victims of sexual abuse - each day.

If wilfully ignoring the problem is now to risk being sent to jail, some might argue our political leaders have questions to answer. Questions too about how today's strategy will improve matters on the front line.

While there is broad support for measures encouraging a greater priority for child sexual abuse, and measures to deal with what the prime minister called the 'walk-on-by' culture, will threatening social workers with jail if they fail in their duties encourage high quality applicants to join and stay in the profession?

Many councils report a high level of social work vacancies - particularly in more senior roles. So-called 'blame culture' is itself blamed for a shortage of qualified staff.

While more money was today announced for victim support groups, local authorities point out that since the election there's been a 20% rise in children referred to social services in England, a 42% in children given protection plans but a 40% real terms cut in council funding.

For many, the political focus on child sexual abuse is welcome, but long overdue.

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper called on the government to create a new offence of child exploitation, saying: "We need a radical overhaul of our child protection system, but I fear this is a missed opportunity to get all the reforms we need."

Labour also wants to see the introduction of mandatory reporting, which would impose a legal duty to report child abuse.

An independent report found that at least 1,400 children were sexually exploited in Rotherham by gangs of men who were predominantly of Pakistani origin between 1997 and 2013.

The report author Professor Alexis Jay said that girls as young as 11 were raped by "large numbers of male perpetrators".

Anonymous child on steps
Prof Jay, who took part in Tuesday's summit, said the issue had been made worse in some cases by the attitude of professionals.

She said: "Social workers were found to describe the issues as being lifestyle choices by some of the children and young people concerned.

"And the police, in my experience, certainly were extremely derogatory in the way they addressed and described the young people concerned."

'Earlier intervention needed'

David Greenwood, a solicitor who represents 39 victims of child sexual exploitation in Rotherham, said: "This is just the beginning of a war against exploiters. There are still many stories to emerge and abusers are still walking the streets.

"Without sustained effort, a generation of children are at risk of having their lives ruined."

David Simmonds, chairman of the Local Government Association's children and young people board, said "abuse needs to be taken seriously on a national level".

He said: "There is no question that those who are responsible for failing vulnerable children should be held to account... but we need to move on from the muddled situation councils currently face, so the detail of today's proposals is important to get right."

Maris Stratulis, England manager at the British Association of Social Workers said: "We totally support public accountability and transparency so welcome any measures that will make it easier for social workers and other professionals to whistle blow."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-31691061


One of his own abused kids but you can't ask him because he's karked it.


Top
 Profile  
 
PostPosted: Thu Mar 05, 2015 1:01 pm 
Offline
User avatar

Joined: Tue Oct 21, 2003 7:25 pm
Posts: 37494
Location: Wayneistan
How Oxford’s police and social services allowed 370 underage girls to be raped


by James Delingpole

I’ve been reading the official report into the latest Muslim rape gang atrocity – in Oxford, this time, city of dreaming spires and the kind of place you’d never imagine such appalling crimes possible over such a period of time and on such a scale.

Be warned: the details are not for the squeamish.

But I think it’s important we’re all fully aware exactly what happened so that we can direct our righteous rage in the appropriate direction. People have been getting away with murder here – and I don’t mean the rapists: at least, finally, at long last, they’re going down. I mean the authorities responsible who, at time of writing, look as if they’re going to get off scot free.

Here, in bullet point form, are some excerpts from the testimony of the estimated 370 victims – all of them white girls, mostly from broken or abusive homes or in “care”, generally aged between about 12 and 15. The abusers were much older men from mainly Kashmiri-Pakistani backgrounds (though one of the convicted men was from Saudi Arabia, another from North Africa), who groomed the girls beforehand. That is they – or one of their younger associates – first showered these vulnerable, emotionally needy girls with affection that some of them had never had before; then they made them feel important and grown up by giving them gifts and alcohol and drugs; then, when the girls were hooked the trap-door suddenly shut and they found themselves being serially abused as sex slaves.

Oh, and the details below – according to the report – are the expurgated version. Apparently there’s other stuff so horrible the report wouldn’t print it.
•They threatened to blow up my house with my Mum in it
•I was expected to do things – if I didn’t they said they would come to my house and burn me alive. I had a baby brother
•They took us to a field where there were other men who had come to have sex with us. I tried not to do it. There were five of them
•I took so many drugs – it was just a mish-mash
•Now I feel I was raped – I didn’t have any choice
•I wouldn’t ever have said no – they’d have beaten the [edited by admin] out of me
•It was always Asian men
•I got deeper and deeper into this group
•Sometimes I was driven into alleys and woods and men would have sex with me
•I wouldn’t have done this if I was sober. That’s why the men gave us so much to drink
•Both men had sex with me lots of times – oral and vaginal
•I hate them… all they do is rape you… all they want is sex… it’s happened to girls I know, not me before you ask, I not like that
•When we were at the flats I knew I was there to have sex with whichever men were brought there.
•He urinated on me
•I was spit roasted [made to have sex simultaneously with two men]
•I didn’t want to go to the places to do what I did, but it was my job
•I went to London on my own to have sex with men they arranged
•The fear is still very real for me – though they are in jail I still check the cars

This was going on for 15 years, remember. So where, you might wonder, were the police?

Well the report makes lots of excuses for them. Apparently, they were a bit confused over what technically constituted under age sex – statutory rape as it would be called in the US; they felt ill-equipped as to how to respond when, say they found a middle aged Pakistani taxi driver in a car with condoms and a drunk girl looking no older than 14 (yeah: maybe it was just her boyfriend, right?); and they hadn’t been taught properly about CSE (Child Sexual Exploitation), which is the formal term now given for this kind of crime.

But the really damning thing for me is the report’s revelations that actually some police officers DID try to speak out, desperately and repeatedly, only to have their concerns squashed or ignored.

[Feel free to skip the extract below. I’ll parse it for you afterwards anyway]


In the Police, there were some illustrations of more junior staff formally informing senior officers about their concerns. In 2006, the then Missing Persons Coordinator (a constable) wrote to the Detective Chief Inspector, copying in the Oxford and Oxfordshire Commanders, about a lack of inquiry into where two girls were or giving them due priority. The Police said this led to better multi-agency planning and a Police visit to Lancashire where there was more experience of sexual exploitation. In 2010, a sergeant wrote to the CAIU Detective Inspector in charge of Missing Persons describing many of the features now known as CSE, and this was fed into subsequent meetings of the Missing Persons Panel.

There is also an example where a City Crime and Neighbourhood Nuisance Officer was hugely concerned about a particular child and escalated to senior staff in other agencies, but not within his own. His Chief Executive was unaware of it until this SCR, despite the work being subject to a director-level complaint from the County Council. The Nuisance Officer was a former Detective Sergeant and acting Detective Inspector with experience in child protection sections of the Police. In 2007-8, he repeatedly raised concerns with senior CSC and Police staff (including the then Director of Children’s Services, but not above his own City team leader) about a particular family and child (one of A-F who was at times looked after), describing her behaviour and associates which today would lead to a speedy recognition that something bigger might be happening, but which at the time led to rather harsh disregard and criticism. For example, in February 2007, he reported “men going into the flat every night and leaving in the early hours of morning” and seeing the 13-year-old lying under a cover with an adult male (which led to a Police Protection Order). He also sought a child protection case conference after a rape allegation but this was turned down. He and a colleague told the OSCB City subgroup about the risks to children from massage parlours and reminded the meeting that his team was continuing to pass to the Police information about 14 and 15 year olds being seen in cars with older men.

This episode is one that agencies must learn from. The Nuisance Officer concerned was helping manage a situation with a very difficult challenging family where the behaviour of adults was the prime focus, but where the behaviour of one child in this review was also a serious issue. The officer gathered very significant information about the girl, her association with much older adults, and her general access to risky situations – having argued in 2007 against her coming off the Child Protection Register, as she was going missing so often.17 He resorted to sending emails to many senior Police and CSC staff such was his concern (which seem from what is known about the child and exploitation quite justified). The SCR has seen correspondence with Police and Social Services about the girl with adult males late at night in January, February, March, June 2007 and February March and May 2008 (when she was 13 or 14 and was under Council supervision or formally in Care)

Whilst Police responses were calm and aimed at reassuring him (and implicitly supported the officer’s intentions, once encouraging him to continue his communications with the County Council), responses from a CSC senior manager were, in the author’s opinion, rather hostile and demeaning. The Nuisance Officer’s emails included phrases like “can we all live with risk that this young girl is exposed to in view of the intelligence we have of her association with Males”. He referred to both ‘Asian’ and ‘black’ males on several occasions. The child was subject to a Care Order and the risks being described were at times when resident in Council care. One CSC response to concerns about sexual association with adults said: “The innuendo relating to her alleged associates I find a little presumptive and unsavoury, and does not in my view indicate a significant prima facie risk of harm…” Another email said that “the evidence beyond innuendo remains thin”. (By this point there were numerous reports collated by the Nuisance Officer of association by the then 14-year-old, late at night, with adult men.) The writer of those messages accepts that their tone was wrong, but at the time believed the course of action the Police and CSC were taking to focus on reducing missing episodes was right.

It’s hard, I would concede, to penetrate all the jargon here. But that in itself I think is indicative of how and why this so-called CSE – organised gang rape, as I prefer to call it – has been able to proliferate in so many towns all over Britain for so long. Note the bureaucracy; the compartmentalisation; the obsession with job designations and accepted practice. This is not a world where people feel any obligation to do the right thing, merely to tick all the right boxes. You get the impression that almost nobody was interested in organised child gang rape until it was given an official label. Or, to put it another way, it seems never to have occurred to many of those in the police or at Oxford council that 11-year old girls being drugged and serially raped and prostituted by gangs of middle-aged Muslim was an issue of concern until they were formally told it was an issue of concern.

Another thing that bone-dry (and ever-so-slightly-exculpatory: it was, after all, written by a social worker) prose fails to capture is what must have been the intense frustration of those few police officers who tried, at almost every possible level, to blow the whistle on what was happening – and still to no avail.

What this indicates is that lots of people in the police knew what was going on – yet still chose to do nothing about it.

Which does rather invite the question: how the hell is the woman who was in charge of the local police – Thames Valley Police – during this period getting out of this not with a reprimand but promotion?

In 2000, Sara Thornton was appointed assistant chief constable at Thames Valley. In 2007, she was promoted to Chief Constable and awarded a CBE. (Now she is off for an even more senior job as chairman of the National Police Chiefs Council. Apparently she is a favourite of Prime Minister David Cameron’s)

So there is no question that a lot of these inexcusable crimes happened on her watch. If she wasn’t privy to all the rumours buzzing around, then that suggests a culpable communication problem within her police force. And if she was privy to them, then why the hell didn’t she do more to stop these revolting child-abusers get away with – and flagrantly too?

As with the chief executives of those too-big-too-fail banks the impression given is that the reward for failure at senior levels of the police is to be given a pat on the back and either promoted – or awarded a nice, fat pay off and a gong. What kind of message does that send out to the Chief Constables of the future? Where is the disincentive for incompetence?

This rule seems to apply even more so to council chief executives. Joanna Simons, chief executive of Oxfordshire County Council, has been offered a £600,000 pay off.

Why? For failing so patently to do the job she was supposed to do?

What’s clear from that report – try though it does to take a generous view of the council’s appalling behaviour – is that Simons presided over a culture of incompetence, political correctness and responsibility-dodging which made those child rapes possible.

Just look at the last par of that excerpt from the report, quoted above. A senior person on the council, Andy Couldrick, who was responsible for Children’s Services, is revealed to have prevented any action being taken to deal with the problem through a mixture of inertia and political correctness.

See how, when the police whistleblower tried alerting them to the problem, this “CSC”‘s main concern was not that under-aged girls were being sexually abused but that the policeman had brought up the awkward issue of the perpetrators being “black” and “Asian” – something which the CSC found to be “presumptive and unsavoury”.

And so, thanks to this council apparatchik’s squeamishness about inappropriate language, dozens more underage girls went on to be drugged, terrorised and raped.

Will this council worker and his or her colleagues be able to live with their consciences now they know of all terrible crimes they made possible? My fear is that a lot of them will be able to all too easily – for such is their mindset they will know no better.

http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/03 ... -be-raped/

_________________
Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
George Carlin


Top
 Profile  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 18 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2

All times are UTC [ DST ]


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 59 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Jump to:  
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group