logo
Starmer announces full inquiry into grooming gangs after resisting calls for probe

Starmer announces full inquiry into grooming gangs after resisting calls for probe

BreakingNews.ie10 hours ago

Keir Starmer will launch a statutory inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal after resisting pressure for months to implement a full national probe.
The British Prime Minister said he had read 'every single word' of an independent report into child sexual exploitation by Baroness Louise Casey and would accept her recommendation for the investigation.
Advertisement
Earlier this year the Government dismissed calls for a public inquiry, saying its focus was on putting in place the outstanding recommendations already made in a seven-year national inquiry by Professor Alexis Jay.
Prof Jay's 2022 report concluded there had been institutional failings across the country and tens of thousands of victims in England and Wales.
But speaking to reporters travelling with him on his visit to Canada, the Prime Minister said: 'From the start I have always said that we should implement the recommendations we have got because we have got many other recommendations… I think there are 200 when you take all of the reviews that have gone on at every level and we have got to get on with implementing them.
'I have never said we should not look again at any issue. I have wanted to be assured that on the question of any inquiry. That's why I asked Louise Casey who I hugely respect to do an audit.
Advertisement
'Her position when she started the audit was that there was not a real need for a national inquiry over and above what was going on.
'She has looked at the material she has looked at and she has come to the view that there should be a national inquiry on the basis of what she has seen.
'I have read every single word of her report and I am going to accept her recommendation. That is the right thing to do on the basis of what she has put in her audit.
'I asked her to do that job to double check on this; she has done that job for me and having read her report, I respect her in any event. I shall now implement her recommendations.'
Advertisement
Asked when it would be launched, he said the probe would be implemented under the Inquiries Act, which will take 'a bit of time to sort out' and would be done in 'an orderly way'.
This means the inquiry will be able to compel witnesses to give evidence.
It is understood the inquiry will be national in scope, co-ordinating a series of targeted local investigations.
A national row over grooming gangs was ignited in January after tech billionaire Elon Musk used his X social media platform to launch a barrage of attacks on Starmer and safeguarding minister Jess Phillips.
Advertisement
It followed the Government's decision to decline a request from Oldham Council for a Whitehall-led inquiry into child sexual abuse in the town.
The Government later commissioned a 'rapid' audit by Lady Casey into the nature and scale of group-based child sexual abuse, which had been due to take three months but was delayed.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who has repeatedly attacked him over his resistance to launching another national probe, said the Prime Minister had to be 'led by the nose to make the correct decision'.
'Keir Starmer doesn't know what he thinks unless an official report has told him so,' she said.
Advertisement
'Just like he dismissed concerns about the winter fuel payment and then had to U-turn, just like he needed the Supreme Court to tell him what a woman is, he had to be led by the nose to make the correct decision here.
'I've been repeatedly calling for a full National Inquiry since January. It's about time he recognised he made a mistake and apologised for six wasted months.
'But this must not be the end of the matter. There are many, many more questions that need answering to ensure this inquiry is done properly and quickly.
'Many survivors of the grooming gangs will be relieved that this is finally happening, but they need a resolution soon, not in several years' time. Justice delayed is justice denied.'
Reform UK leader and Clacton MP Nigel Farage said the move was a 'welcome U-turn' and would 'expose the multiple failings of the British establishment'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scottish Tories struggle to be heard after election skelping
Scottish Tories struggle to be heard after election skelping

The Herald Scotland

time30 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Scottish Tories struggle to be heard after election skelping

'We stopped Nicola Sturgeon converting her gender bill into law. And we have watched Labour try government — but Sir Keir Starmer keeps dropping the ball.' But for all the jibes, the problem facing Mr Findlay's party is that they are struggling to even get on the pitch. READ MORE Findlay: Tories can win seats at Holyrood election despite polls pointing to drubbing Tories unveil plans for 'Scottish first' medical student training policy For Women Scotland threaten SNP with fresh legal action over Supreme Court ruling The party suffered its worst-ever defeat at last year's general election, slumping to just 121 seats UK-wide — a loss of 244. In Scotland, the scale of the collapse was slightly masked. Despite a chaotic campaign that saw Douglas Ross alienate members and then quit before polling day, the party managed to hold on to five of its six seats. Although the Tory vote halved, support for the SNP — the main challengers in each Conservative-held seat — declined even more sharply. The ghosts of Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak continue to haunt the party, while the spectre of Nigel Farage looms ever larger. The latest projections from Professor Sir John Curtice, based on last month's Survation poll, paint a bleak picture for next year's Holyrood vote. His modelling has the Tories slumping to fourth place with just 13 MSPs — less than half their current tally of 30. The SNP would return 58 seats, while Reform UK would leapfrog the Conservatives to become the main opposition on 21. Labour would win 18 seats, with the LibDems and Greens on 10 and 8 respectively. Mr Findlay did not shy away from the scale of the challenge, admitting that a huge effort would be needed to even earn the right to be heard. Yet despite the grim outlook, the party is hopeful. 'You would think we had no right to be as upbeat as we are, but it is the phenomena of the Conservative Party,' said Stephen Kerr, MSP for Central Scotland. 'Against all of the odds, we are feeling genuinely optimistic and positive.'I think we knew that 2024 was going to be terrible. Having taken that skelping, I think people are back to renew the party — and that is the strong statement of both Russell and Kemi's remarks.' 'We are sitting in a much diminished form at Westminster, our worst ever election result in over 250 years of the Conservative Party really being in existence. And really beginning the fightback,' shadow Scottish secretary Andrew Bowie told Unspun Live, The Herald's politics podcast. 'And that is where we are right now — beginning that long, hard slog of regaining the trust of the British people, hopefully with a view to getting back into power in short order in four years' time.' Mr Findlay has settled into the role of party leader. He is much more relaxed and less like the deer trapped in the headlights he resembled when he took over from Douglas Ross last September. He is putting the effort in. One Tory staffer said the boss had rehearsed his 42-minute address at least eight times before delivering it to party members on Saturday lunchtime. It was an unashamedly Conservative speech with a raft of policies rooted in the party's traditional values: tax cuts funded by £650 million in savings from slashing quangos and civil service jobs; scrapping the SNP's 2045 net zero target; and a pledge to train more Scottish medical students to reduce NHS reliance on immigration. For years, Scottish Tory speeches at conference have been dominated by saying no to indyref2. That was in Mr Findlay's speech, of course — but it was his programme for government that was to the fore. 'The way we beat Reform is by having good, proper policies in place. We have not seen very much from Reform policy-wise,' North East list MSP Douglas Lumsden told The Herald on Sunday. 'I still think there is enough time [to turn things around]. It is 11 months before the election and this is about building a positive message we can take next year. 'We absolutely need to move on from the past.' The scale of the party's challenge — and the threat from Reform — was made painfully clear earlier this month at the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election, where the Tories came a distant fourth. In a seat where they had won 17.5% at the last Holyrood election, they only just managed to hold on to their Reform took 26% of the vote. While Labour's surprise win has led to grumblings in the SNP, Mr Lumsden insists the party is united behind Mr Findlay. 'We are 100% behind Russell. There is no briefing at all from anyone. Russell has a brilliant personality and the more people who get to know him the more they like him — so we need to promote Russell.' READ MORE While Mr Findlay's position might be safe, the same cannot be said for Kemi Badenoch. Potential leadership hopefuls are on manoeuvres. The leader of the opposition delivered her speech on Friday. It was only her second trip to Scotland since becoming leader in November. 'There is a lot of work to be done, a lot of messaging, a lot of renewal — and she has got the runway that Russell and the rest of us do not have,' Mr Kerr said. 'I am not worried about threats to her leadership. She is letting her colleagues get on with it. She is not a leader who is lying awake worrying about a challenge to her leadership,' he added. 'Anybody who is going to contest Kemi or Russell for leadership right now is mad — because the challenges will not change.' Mr Kerr compared Ms Badenoch to Margaret Thatcher: 'I am old enough to remember our first female leader and the same stuff was being said about her in terms of her role as Leader of the Opposition and her performance and PMQs — and look what happened to her.' 'You know, we have been written off as a party before,' Mr Findlay told The Herald on Sunday. 'There are many people at this conference who have been around for a very long time, and they have seen some pretty dark days. 'And you know what keeps people going? You know that resilience that we all saw in the hall today — it is because we know that what we stand for is right. 'We stand for personal responsibility, lower taxation, fairer taxes for people, integrity and ensuring the very best public services. We want a Scottish Parliament that is entirely focused on delivering for Scotland — not the fringe obsessions of the SNP and Labour.'So we will be fighting for every single vote.' Murrayfield is used to resilience and fighting talk — it is also, however, no stranger to the wooden spoon, a fate Mr Findlay will be desperae to avoid next May.

Top school rocked by deepfake AI porn shame - as parents SLAM staff for not raising the alarm on explicit fake pics of female students
Top school rocked by deepfake AI porn shame - as parents SLAM staff for not raising the alarm on explicit fake pics of female students

Daily Mail​

time33 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Top school rocked by deepfake AI porn shame - as parents SLAM staff for not raising the alarm on explicit fake pics of female students

A teenage student who was caught creating explicit nude AI fakes of girls at his top Queensland school escaped being kicked out even after he was charged over it. Now furious parents have lashed staff at Grace Lutheran College in Moreton Bay for refusing to call in cops when the alert was first raised a year ago. A member of staff instead ordered students to delete the images from their own phones and told them to speak to police themselves. Queensland Police said the explicit images were first reported on May 27, 2024, before more families filed reports in July. A spokesman said officers 'worked with the school throughout the investigation'. Authorities dealt with the 15-year-old boy under provisions of the Youth Justice Act on April 19 this year for one count each of possessing child exploitation material, distributing child exploitation material. But Grace Lutheran College did not expel the boy over the matter and his victims have now said they feel unsafe around the student. The schoolgirls said innocent images had been taken from their social media profiles and altered with AI before being recirculated among pupils on Snapchat. One victim alleged students told school staff about the incident but claims they were told they needed to deal with it themselves. 'The school also asked to see some students' phones and said to delete any naked photos we'd been sent, which meant all evidence on hand was destroyed,' she told the Courier Mail. 'We felt the school didn't believe we were victims and dismissed us as though we were trying to be part of the drama. 'We still need to attend school with this boy, feeling unsafe and distracted.' Some of the images had been left on students' phones after being screenshotted by officials, the student added. She fears the images could now resurface in the future and wreck the lives of victims if it's not clear the images are fake. One parent said the police investigation was hampered by staff members allegedly giving instructions to delete images. She said the school's response was inadequate and staff failed in their duty of care. Police told her her they had identified the images' creator using his IP address last year and not through information from the school, and said the college had never reported the incident to police. The parent said it was unfair to the victims that the boy had been allowed to remain at the school which made students feel unsafe and uncomfortable. Parents have now emailed the school demanding the teenager is expelled. But the school last week said it was inappropriate for parents to demand specific disciplinary outcomes. 'The college first became aware of this matter in or around mid May 2024, at which time it took immediate action in accordance with its code of conduct and behaviour management policies,' the school wrote. Daily Mail Australia has contacted the school for comment. It comes after a separate Lutheran Education school in the state was embroiled in a nude social media scandal. Students of Noosaville school Good Shepherd Lutheran College allegedly posted illegal images on Snapchat, with the school reportedly made aware in February. The incident was not reported to police until May. Police confirmed earlier this week a boy from Noosa Heads was charged with a single count of use carriage service to menage, harass or cause offence.

Labour's £14bn 'fixation' with new nuclear power 'won't cut bills or help climate'
Labour's £14bn 'fixation' with new nuclear power 'won't cut bills or help climate'

Daily Record

timean hour ago

  • Daily Record

Labour's £14bn 'fixation' with new nuclear power 'won't cut bills or help climate'

The UK Government last week announced a new 'golden age' of nuclear but academics and campaigners warn it will be a costly energy fail. Labour's £14billion 'fixation' with new nuclear power will be a costly flop and do nothing to lower Scots' bills or hit climate targets, experts have warned. It comes after Keir Starmer's goverment last week announced a 'golden age' of nuclear energy with a £14.2billion investment to finally build the delayed Sizewell C plant in Suffolk which it claimed will create 10,000 jobs. ‌ Ministers say the move is vital to prevent future blackouts and to help the shift to a low carbon economy. ‌ Now campaigners and academics warned nuclear energy is too expensive and plants take too long to build to make any dent in net zero efforts or prevent future blackouts. And they said the result of 'inevitable' cost overruns on nuclear projects would lead to a 'nuclear tax' on consumer bills. It follows pressure on the SNP to end its block on nuclear projects, with Labour saying it could open ­Scotland up to small modular reactors (SMR) if it wins at Holyrood next year. But Pete Roche, an Edinburgh energy consultant and anti-nuclear campaigner, said: "It's too late for nuclear. It takes too long to build. "We're trying to tackle a climate crisis here, we need to be fast - the faster, the better. ‌ "You can insulate people's homes and put up wind farms quite quickly in comparison to how long it takes to build a nuclear power station. "And the worry is when you're putting all your eggs in the nuclear basket, the money is getting diverted, civil servants' attention is getting diverted. "We're not focused enough on getting the energy transition based on renewables off the ground. ‌ "It's a fixation and the UK is not on its own. There's all sorts of talk in other countries of building nuclear power stations again. "It's almost like a mass psychosis because if they really investigated properly what the best use of public funds would be, nuclear wouldn't get a look-in." ‌ Dr Paul Dorfman, of the Bennett Institute at the University of Sussex, said more than £20billion had now been committed to Sizewell C but the final bill could easily be double that and likely more. He told the Sunday Mail: 'The vast majority of that money comes from public subsidy - in other words, the public will have to pay for all the inevitable over-costs and overruns, which is basically a nuclear tax.' Dr Dorfman continued: 'In Scotland, given the country's vast renewable power capacity, one wonders what would be the reason to burden Scotland with new nuclear. ‌ 'New nuclear builds, wherever they're built, are always vastly over cost and over time. 'Hinkley Point C [in Somerset] is already 90 per cent over budget and seven years late, with at least seven years of construction remaining. 'And the form of reactor that is doomed to be constructed at Sizewell C is the same reactor being built at Hinkley C.' ‌ He added: 'It is possible to sustain a reliable power system by expanding r enewables on all levels, whether that's solar, wind, geothermal, hydrogen, storage and all the rest of it… 'But nuclear risks eating all of the cake. ‌ 'The time lost may prove catastrophic, because according to the UK Government, it takes up to 17 years to build just one nuclear power plant. 'Meanwhile all SMRs are in the design phase. 'In terms of the climate, we are running out of time now.' ‌ And because of the time it takes to build a nuclear station, he declared: 'Nuclear cannot keep the lights on.' Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. ‌ Tor Justad, chair of Highlands Against Nuclear Power (HANP), highlighted the continuing issues related to the old Dounreay plant which shut down in 1985 around radioactive waste. He said: 'For me, investing in nuclear makes no sense, whether economically or in terms of safety or benefit to the wider community. 'We don't need these massive white elephants which always end up costing twice what they started with and take twice the length of time to build than they predicted. ‌ 'And this argument about base load doesn't take into account the storage possibilities for renewables that we're developing at a rapid pace, including here in the Highlands. 'We can store electricity now in ways that we never could do ten years ago, and that will continue to improve.' He added Labour's pro-nuclear stance is 'a real danger' in Scotland. ‌ The UK Government's Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said: 'We reject these views." Noting the £14.2billion investment and jobs boost, it added: 'We are ending the no-nuclear status quo as part of our Plan for Change and are entering a golden age of nuclear with the biggest building programme in a generation... "This is the government's clean energy mission in action – investing in lower bills and good jobs for energy security.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store