According to DailyMail UK(28th, 2014) stated that, Not one council boss or police chief was prepared to shoulder the blame yesterday for their failure to stop the horrific abuse of at least 1,400 vulnerable children.
The shameless buck-passing continued even as detectives were urged to finally hunt down the child rapists – mainly of Asian origin – who they allowed to escape justice for 16 years. Among the officials shrugging off responsibility was police and crime commissioner Shaun Wright, who stubbornly defied demands for his resignation from the Home Secretary.
And when senior Labour figures also told him to go he renounced his membership of the party. Despite being responsible for children’s services from 2005 to 2010 – when the abuse in Rotherham was at its height – Mr Wright claimed a damning report highlighting its full extent came as a ‘huge surprise’. He added: ‘I don’t think any of this was my direct fault.’
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‘Not my fault’: Police and crime commissioner Shaun Wright (left) and social services director Joyce Thacker
Ged Fitzgerald, who led Rotherham Council until 2003 (left) and the council’s current deputy leader Paul Lakin
Others denying culpability include former Rotherham council boss Ged Fitzgerald, deputy leader Paul Lakin and social services chief Joyce Thacker, who has suggested parents should share the blame. In other developments:
- Lawyers representing 15 victims are suing the council and police in a class action for damages;
- Officials who failed to prevent the abuse have gone on to plum public sector jobs elsewhere
- No one is likely to be sacked or disciplined
- One of only five men ever convicted is already out of prison and walking the streets of Rotherham
- Police are investigating another 51 sexual abuse allegations in the town.
Simon Danczuk, the Rochdale MP responsible for exposing the paedophile past of Liberal politician Cyril Smith, told MailOnline: ‘There are hundreds of child rapists out there. What are South Yorkshire Police doing to catch these people?’
The independent report into the scandal by Professor Alexis Jay detailed abject failures by a range of agencies and senior executives between 1997 and 2013. Astonishingly many of the individuals involved remain in highly-paid public sector jobs.
They include Ged Fitzgerald, now the £200,000-a-year chief executive of Liverpool City Council, who led Rotherham council until 2003. Social services chiefs from the town, whose job was to oversee the protection of girls from paedophiles, have also displayed a complete lack of contrition.
Sonia Sharp, who was child protection chief at Rotherham between 2005 and 2008, is now a senior education official in Australia and her work is heralded as an example of ‘best practice’ to foreign dignitaries.
Social services director Joyce Thacker suggested parents should share the blame for not looking after their children when a gang of Asian men was jailed for sexually abusing girls in the town four years ago. She remains in her £115,000-a-year job.
Yesterday she was unapologetic: ‘Protecting young people from harm is not the responsibility of any single agency and as a community we need to continue to work together to tackle this horrific crime.’
The report revealed how senior figures in the police and at Rotherham council (pictured are the council’s offices at Riverside House in Rotherham) wanted the ‘ethnic dimension’ to the abuse problem downplayed
Yesterday council executives, police chiefs and local politicians at the centre of the furore appeared to be turning a blind eye for demands that anyone should be held responsible.
Only the council leader Roger Stone has quit. Deputy leader Paul Lakin, who is in charge of children’s services, said he did not know of the extent of the problems.
Mr Wright, who became PCC in 2012 as the Labour candidate, also claimed yesterday he was unaware of the ‘industrial scale’ of abuse in his home town.
He said: ‘There was systemic failure and I only wish that I knew more at the time.’
But politicians were not satisfied with his comments and insisted he had to go.
Theresa May, the Home Secretary, said: ‘It’s not my job as Home Secretary to hire and fire police and crime commissioners.
‘The whole point of them is that they are elected by the people, so ultimately it is a choice for the electorate.
Adil Hussain (left) and Razwan Razaq (right) were jailed in 2010 for grooming young girls as part of the gang
Umar Razaq (left) was also jailed and placed on the sex offenders’ register while Zafran Ramzan (right), 21, was jailed for nine years
‘But I believe his own party have called for him to resign. I believe he has real questions to answer and I think in the circumstances he should heed those calls.’
Home Secretary Theresa May, says it is her job to hire and fire police and crime commissioners
Labour shadow chancellor Ed Balls said it was ‘absolutely’ the party’s view that he should stand down.
A party source said: ‘We have given Shaun Wright time to reflect. If he has not resigned by the morning we will suspend him from the Labour Party.’
Lisa Harker, director of strategy at the NSPCC, said: ‘This isn’t just about who knew what and when.
‘Anyone in a senior leadership position has a duty – both moral and corporate – to instil a culture where children can be heard and believed.
‘Those in leadership positions who turned a blind eye to child rape and exploitation should consider their positions and be held to account.’
The report revealed how senior figures in the police and council wanted the ‘ethnic dimension’ to the abuse problem downplayed and were ‘in denial’ about the race element to the offending.
Culture Secretary Sajid Javid, who is the most senior Asian Tory MP, tweeted: ‘It’s definitely not racist to ask why a majority of Rotherham abusers were Asian men.
‘How else will we learn from these awful crimes?’
And the town’s disgraced former Labour MP Denis MacShane blamed the failures on a ‘culture of not wanting to rock the multi-cultural unity boat’.
Labour shadow chancellor Ed Balls (above) said it was the party’s view that Shaun Wright should stand down
Speaking yesterday, Professor Jay appeared to dismiss excuses by senior officials that they were unaware of the problems of abuse.
She said that given the information available to agencies by April 2005, nobody could say ‘I didn’t know’.
She added: ‘Part of my remit was to identify what information was available to key people in positions of influence throughout that time. And there was certainly a very great deal of information available from an early stage.’
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