
Public must ‘keep calm' over ethnicity of grooming gang offenders, says Louise Casey
The public must 'keep calm' over the ethnicity of grooming gang offenders, the author of a high-profile report has urged, saying police data from one region suggested that the race of child abuse suspects was proportional with the local population.
The comments from Louise Casey came as Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, defended herself from claims that she was attempting to politicise the scandal of the organised rape of girls by men across dozens of towns over at least 25 years.
Lady Casey's report on Monday found evidence of 'over-representation' of Asian and Pakistani heritage men among suspects of 'group sexual exploitation' of children, according to data from three police forces.
Related: Casey report forces Starmer's hand on issue that has haunted Labour for decades
Casey told MPs on Tuesday that she was concerned that the limited data available on the race and ethnicity of offenders was not being used responsibly as part of the public debate on grooming gangs.
She said the report examined data from Greater Manchester police (GMP), which covers towns including Rochdale and Oldham where convicted grooming gangs operated.
'If you look at the data on child exploitation, suspects and offenders, it is disproportionately Asian heritage,' she said. 'If you look at the data for child abuse, it is not disproportionate and it is white men.
'So just a note to everybody, outside here rather than in here, let's just keep calm about how you interrogate data and what you get from it.'
According to the report, GMP's figures showed that 52% of suspects involved in multi-victim/multi-offender cases of child sexual exploitation over a three-year period were Asian, compared with 38% who were white.
When examining suspects for all child sex abuse crimes, not just grooming, the same force's data shows that 16% were Asian and 44% were white, while 32% of suspects were of 'unknown' ethnicity. The last census figures show that 57% of Greater Manchester is white and 21% is Asian, according to the report.
Related: UK grooming gangs inquiry 'must confront uncomfortable truths'
Keir Starmer said later on Tuesday that Badenoch had done about grooming gangs when the Tories were in power and asked why she had not brought forward a mandatory duty for authorities to report child sexual exploitation when she was a minister.
'Why didn't you do it? Why didn't you say one word about it?' the prime minister asked in a direct message to Badenoch as he spoke to reporters at the G7 summit in Canada.
Starmer also defended his record, saying he brought about the first prosecutions of grooming gang members while director of public prosecutions, changed the rules to make gang prosecution easier and called for mandatory reporting, which the Conservatives rejected.
'I'm now the prime minister who has passed into law mandatory reporting, who has taken forward the unique identifier for children, because I've always been really worried that children falling outside of school are not being picked up, and they are very vulnerable to exploitation,' he said. 'And obviously now [I have] announced this national inquiry.'
Casey told the BBC's Newsnight on Monday that she was 'disappointed' by the Conservatives' response to her review of the grooming gangs scandal. 'We need to change some laws, we need to do a national criminal investigation, we need to get on with a national inquiry with local footprint in it, and ideally wouldn't it be great if everybody came behind that and backed you?' she said.
'I felt the opposition could have just been a bit, you know, 'Yes we will all come together behind you.' Maybe there's still time to do that. I think it's just so important that they do.'
At a hastily arranged press conference, Badenoch said she was 'not doing politics now' but criticised people who sought to 'tone police those who are pointing out when something has gone wrong'.
'I do think that we should take the politics out of it. But who was it that said when we raised this issue that we were pandering to the far right? That's what brought the politics into it,' she said.
Badenoch said her party backed a national inquiry into the scandal and had been calling for one 'for six months'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
UK Inheritance Tax Surge on Rich Was Mistake, Policy Author Says
One of the architects of the UK Labour government's flagship crackdown on the wealthy said it was a 'mistake' to expose non-doms to an immediate 40% inheritance tax on their overseas assets. Arun Advani, director of the independent Centre for the Analysis of Taxation, told Bloomberg News he had recommended staggering the introduction of IHT on the super-rich who live in Britain but are not resident for tax purposes. A gradual approach would have stopped many of them leaving the country, he said.


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
British parliament takes first step toward decriminalizing late-term abortions
The British parliament took the first step toward decriminalizing late-term abortions in England and Wales on Tuesday. In a 379-137 vote, the House of Commons approved an amendment to a broader crime bill to prevent women from being prosecuted for having abortions after the legal limit, potentially through birth. The current law prohibits abortions after 24 weeks, except under specific circumstances such as the life of the mother. Labour Member of Parliament Tonia Antoniazzi, who introduced the amendment, said the change was necessary on behalf of the more than 100 women investigated over the last five years for suspected illegal abortions. As quoted by the Associated Press, she said, "This piece of legislation will only take women out of the criminal justice system because they are vulnerable and they need our help." Antoniazzi added, "Just what public interest is this serving? This is not justice, it is cruelty and it has got to end." Changes in the law implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic now allow UK women to receive abortion pills through the mail for use within the first 10 weeks of pregnancy. That has led to several instances in which women were prosecuted for obtaining abortion pills illegally to terminate pregnancies after 24 weeks or more. One woman, a mother of three, was sentenced to two years in prison for medically inducing an abortion around her eight-month mark in 2023. An appeals court reduced her sentence a month later, and she was released. The judge said that case called for "compassion, not punishment" and there was no useful purpose in jailing her. Alithea Williams of the UK Society for the Protection of Unborn Children condemned the vote in a statement. "We are horrified that MPs have voted for this extreme and barbaric proposal. If this clause becomes law, a woman who aborts her baby at any point in pregnancy, even moments before birth, would not be committing a criminal offence," Williams said. "In fact, by dismissing the Infant Life Preservation Act intended to provide legal protection to a child during birth, a woman who killed her baby during delivery would not be committing an offence." "And this has been pushed by an abortion lobby cynically exploiting a situation that they brought about," she added. "The cases they use of women being prosecuted for abortion – a number in the single digits – came about because of a policy they championed – sending women abortion pills in the post without in person appointments." Another amendment would have prohibited medical professionals from being prosecuted for helping a woman obtain an abortion, but it did not get a vote. The crime bill must now pass through the House of Commons before proceeding to the House of Lords. It can be delayed there, but not blocked.


CBS News
3 hours ago
- CBS News
U.K. parliament poised to decriminalize abortion in England and Wales as crime bill amendment passes easily
London — British lawmakers voted Tuesday to decriminalize abortion in England and Wales after a lawmaker argued it was cruel to prosecute women for ending a pregnancy. The House of Commons approved an amendment to a broader crime bill that would prevent women from being criminally punished under an antiquated law. Tonia Antoniazzi, the Labour Party member of Parliament who introduced one of the amendments, said the change was needed because police have investigated more than 100 women for suspected illegal abortions over the past five years, including some who suffered natural miscarriages and stillbirths. "This piece of legislation will only take women out of the criminal justice system because they are vulnerable and they need our help," she said. "Just what public interest is this serving? This is not justice, it is cruelty and it has got to end." The amendment passed 379-137. The House of Commons will now need to pass the crime bill, which is expected, before it goes to the House of Lords, where it can be delayed but not blocked. Protesters from the "Abortion Rights" group gather near the U.K. Parliament in London, where lawmakers were voting on an amendment to decriminalize abortion, June 17, 2025. Alishia Abodunde/Getty Under current law, doctors can legally carry out abortions in England, Scotland and Wales up to 24 weeks, and beyond that under special circumstances, such as when the life of the mother is in danger. Abortion in Northern Ireland was decriminalized in 2019. There is no specific law in Scotland barring abortions, and the country is generally viewed as more lenient in its approach to enforcing other laws that could apply in abortion cases, though rights advocates continue to call for a domestic law specifically decriminalizing the act. Changes in the law implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic allow women to receive abortion pills through the mail and terminate their own pregnancies at home within the first 10 weeks in England and Wales. That has led to a handful of widely publicized cases in which women were prosecuted for illegally obtaining abortion pills and using them to end their own pregnancies after 24 weeks or more. Anti-abortion groups opposed the measures, arguing it would open the door to abortion on demand at any stage of pregnancy. "Unborn babies will have any remaining protection stripped away, and women will be left at the mercy of abusers," said Alithea Williams, public policy manager for the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, which describes itself as the U.K.'s biggest pro-life campaign group. The debate came after recent prosecutions have galvanized support to repeal parts of the 1861 Offences Against the Person Act. In one case, a mother of three was sentenced to more than two years in prison in 2023 for medically inducing an abortion about eight months into her pregnancy. Carla Foster, 45, was released about a month later by an appeals court that reduced her sentence. Judge Victoria Sharp said that case called for "compassion, not punishment" and there was no useful purpose in jailing her. Last month, a jury acquitted Nicola Packer on a charge of unlawfully self-administering poison or a noxious thing with intent to procure a miscarriage. Packer, who took abortion medicine when she was about 26 weeks pregnant, testified that she did not know she had been pregnant more than 10 weeks. Supporters of the bill said it was a landmark reform that would keep women from going to prison for ending their pregnancy. "At a time when we're seeing rollbacks on reproductive rights, most notably in the United States, this crucial milestone in the fight for reproductive rights sends a powerful message that our lawmakers are standing up for women," said Louise McCudden of MSI Reproductive Choices. A second amendment that would have gone even further than Antoniazzi's proposal, barring the prosecution of medical professionals and others who help women abort their fetuses, did not get to a vote. A competing Conservative measure that would have required an in-person appointment for a pregnant woman to get abortion pills was defeated.