UK's National Crime Agency asked to investigate grooming gangs abusive of girls
16/6/2025 6:12
The British government said
on Sunday it would ask the policing agency that investigates
serious and organised crime to help track down more people
suspected of being involved in grooming gangs that sexually
abused thousands of girls.
The scandal, in which gangs of mostly Pakistani men groomed
and raped young white girls more than a decade ago, returned to
the political agenda this year after U.S. billionaire Elon Musk
criticised the British government.
Under pressure to act, the government said on Sunday
that the National Crime Agency would be asked to find more
people who have escaped prosecution, building on the work of the
police who have reopened over 800 historic cases.
"The vulnerable young girls, who suffered unimaginable abuse
at the hands of groups of adult men, have now grown into brave
women who are rightly demanding justice," Yvette Cooper,
Britain's interior minister, said in a statement.
"Not enough people listened to them then. That was wrong and
unforgivable. We are changing that now."
A new report by Louise Casey, a member of Britain's upper
house of parliament, into the scale and nature of the abuse is
expected to be published on Monday, a government official said.
After months of resistance, British Prime Minister Keir
Starmer said over the weekend that he wanted a new national
inquiry into the grooming gangs.
A 2014 inquiry found at least 1,400 children were subjected
to sexual exploitation in Rotherham, northern England, between
1997 and 2013.
That report said the majority of known perpetrators were of
Pakistani heritage and that in some cases local officials and
other agencies had been wary of identifying ethnic origins for
fear of upsetting community cohesion, or being seen as racist.
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