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New law to prosecute those who fail to report child sex abuse in England

2 April: The government is proposing a new law that would make it mandatory for anyone who works with children in England to report any suspicions of child sexual abuse or risk being prosecuted. The proposal – which will be subject to a consultation – follows a recommendation made last year by the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA). The home secretary said she wanted to address one of the “biggest national scandals”.

More details are expected to be announced by Suella Braverman in the next few days. The IICSA published its final report last October, describing the extent of abuse in England and Wales as “horrific and deeply disturbing”.

It heard testimonies from about 7,000 victims of abuse during its seven-year investigation, which was set up after the Jimmy Savile scandal. It urged the government to introduce criminal sanctions for anyone working with children who failed to act on indications of sexual abuse. ‘Social ignorance’ Ms Braverman told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme that while the blame lay with the perpetrators for “committing heinous and vile acts of depravity” there was also “a social ignorance” among authorities.

“Silence has enabled this abuse we need to ensure a duty on those professionals that they can’t get away with inaction,” she said. She said that in towns across the country, “vulnerable white girls living in troubled circumstances have been abused, drugged, raped, and exploited” by networks of gangs of rapists, which she said were “overwhelmingly” composed of British-Pakistani males.

“Some councillors, senior politicians, in Labour-run areas over a period of years absolutely failed to take action because of cultural sensitivities, not wanting to come across as racist, not wanting to call out people along ethnic lines. “The authorities aware of these problems have turned a blind eye and roundly failed to take the right action to safeguard these girls,” she said.”

“Labour’s Tracy Brabin, mayor of West Yorkshire, accused her of using a “dog whistle” – but she claimed she was only speaking the truth.

Lisa Nandy, Labour’s shadow levelling-up secretary, said that some politicians and officers in Rochdale and Rotherham did not report cases of abuse “sometimes for fear of political correctness”, as the reports revealed.

But she said: “The home secretary is a joke for saying that there was a wilful blind eye, near complicit silence, and lack of action. She is basically describing herself.”

Ms Nandy said that in the last four years, the number of convictions for child sexual exploitation had dropped by half. “People are waiting almost two years on average just to get to court… there is no excuse for any more delays and inaction,” she said.

She said she had been demanding mandatory reporting for 20 years, and further criticised the government for consulting on its plans before adopting them. Ms Braverman “needs to come forward with actual measures to keep children safe in this country”, Ms Nandy said. In an article written for the Mail on Sunday, Ms Braverman said she had “committed to introduce mandatory reporting across the whole of England”.

She referred to widespread abuse that affected Rotherham for years – and wrote that crimes like abuse “create such a burning sense of injustice among the public” if they went unpunished.

The “overwhelming majority” of safeguarding professionals, such as teachers and social workers, saw it as their “duty” to report signs of such offences, Ms Braverman wrote.

But she said ministers had to take a tougher approach, to make sure that those who failed in their responsibilities faced the “full force of the law”.

She promised Prime Minister Rishi Sunak would set out further measures on Monday.”

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