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Groomed. A National scandal Ch 4 - Wed 30 April 9 pm

(65 Posts)
Primrose53 Mon 28-Apr-25 17:40:23

www.channel4.com/press/news/channel-4-commissions-landmark-film-gang-grooming-featuring-devastating-stories

I know we have discussed this in recent weeks but this is very powerful and disturbing.

Three of the girls featured were helped and are still being helped by The Maggie Oliver Foundation. I realise some of you do not like her for whatever reason, but my goodness she really has always supported these victims of grooming gangs.

Beeb Wed 30-Apr-25 15:25:21

Thank you Primrose53 for highlighting this program.

Iam64 Wed 30-Apr-25 15:45:06

Norway seems to support good public services .
It invests in early years, subsidises high quality childcare . I can imagine a similar scheme working I a village or small suburb that started life as a village
Less so perhaps in the areas these girls live in

Primrose53 Wed 30-Apr-25 22:15:02

Apologies galore from Police but it’s still going on.

Truly shocking how staff at children’s homes turned a blind eye to Pakistani men hanging around outside and regularly taking young girls away in their cars or taxis. If anyone reported this, the Police took no notice.

Girls of 14 reporting being vaginally and anally raped by two men at the same time. Other girls being plied with drink or injected with heroin.

The overwhelming number of these rapists were British Pakistani according to the girls and the Police.

Sago Wed 30-Apr-25 22:49:45

In 2003/4 our daughter witnessed this, her 1st floor flat overlooked an Asian take away.

Young girls would arrive followed by much older men.

Our daughter and flatmates reported this, Police did nothing, they then emailed the local MP and copied in the Police chief.

They eventually set up surveillance in our daughter’s flat.

In the period of time the cameras were installed, the ringleader actually turned up in his black Range Rover with young girls, there was a lot of activity and our daughter and friends were sure it would lead to arrests and prosecution.

No, Police said there was not enough evidence.

About 5 years ago our daughter spoke to a BBC researcher and provided the email trail.

Nothing.

Katie Hopkins however interviewed her on the radio and took great interest in her story.

Sadly it’s still happening today.

The documentary was excellent, how brave of the young women to speak out.

I wept for them.

Iam64 Thu 01-May-25 08:49:41

The documentary was good. The three young women brave enough to speak gave such honest, moving testimonies.

Primrose, I can only speak for staff at the two children’s homes I knew well in the late 90’s then another in about 2010. They did not turn any blind eyes. They discussed their high level of concerns with senior managers. They reported girls missing for days, returning in dreadful states, reporting they’d been taken to several towns and sexually abused by multiple men, given drugs and alcohol etc. Lack of resources and the complexity in prosecuting men who claimed the girls were willing participants as they always returned.
I’m not defending any of this. My view in 1998 when I first came across it was it needed resourcing with experienced detectives, social workers and psychologists.

One of the worst things from last nights documentary was the young woman who was convicted sex offender after taking a younger friend to a ‘party’. The same happened to one of the girls in Three Girls the Rochdale drama. The other thing that will stay with me is the ‘fight back’ from some in the Muslim Pakistani community where there’s belief these girls are lying for compensation. Very like the accusations against Victoria Giuffre and others.

Maggie Oliver was impressive in this documentary. It’s important we don’t forget all the other women (and it was largely women) raising this with little effect.

We don’t need a national inquiry, we need the Jay recommendations implemented. We need resources put into investigating, prosecuting, prevention and therapeutic support for the victims

Aber57 Thu 01-May-25 10:12:57

How brave were those women to come forward with their horrific stories. Childhoods taken away from them.

Primrose53 Thu 01-May-25 15:27:46

Iam64

The documentary was good. The three young women brave enough to speak gave such honest, moving testimonies.

Primrose, I can only speak for staff at the two children’s homes I knew well in the late 90’s then another in about 2010. They did not turn any blind eyes. They discussed their high level of concerns with senior managers. They reported girls missing for days, returning in dreadful states, reporting they’d been taken to several towns and sexually abused by multiple men, given drugs and alcohol etc. Lack of resources and the complexity in prosecuting men who claimed the girls were willing participants as they always returned.
I’m not defending any of this. My view in 1998 when I first came across it was it needed resourcing with experienced detectives, social workers and psychologists.

One of the worst things from last nights documentary was the young woman who was convicted sex offender after taking a younger friend to a ‘party’. The same happened to one of the girls in Three Girls the Rochdale drama. The other thing that will stay with me is the ‘fight back’ from some in the Muslim Pakistani community where there’s belief these girls are lying for compensation. Very like the accusations against Victoria Giuffre and others.

Maggie Oliver was impressive in this documentary. It’s important we don’t forget all the other women (and it was largely women) raising this with little effect.

We don’t need a national inquiry, we need the Jay recommendations implemented. We need resources put into investigating, prosecuting, prevention and therapeutic support for the victims

That was shocking indeed about the fight back from Muslim Pakistani families who believe those poor girls were at fault not their men! I nearly threw something at the TV when one of the convicted rapists actually rang from inside prison.

Wyllow3 Thu 01-May-25 15:42:58

Iam did say "some", don't forget the many who condemned, or indeed Nazir Afzal. but of course unforgivable, but not to tar all with same brush.

Wyllow3 Thu 01-May-25 15:45:27

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-23087686

Iam64 Thu 01-May-25 16:50:20

One of the many problems is getting enough evidence to prosecute. It remains the case that in rape/child sexual abuse trials the judge warns the jury of the dangers in convicting o. The unsubstantiated word of the victim. No wonder prosecutions are rare, convictions rarer

winterwhite Thu 01-May-25 17:35:39

Iam64, well said in both your posts.

A priority has to be preventing young girls from becoming victims in the first place. In the major investigations it was the case that the same poor girls went out to meet the same men again and again, reported what had happened to them but would not name the men. This is how 'victim blaming arose'.

We need more and better youth services. More bobbies on the beat and outside schools at the end of the day. More help to hold struggling families together, greater encouragement of parental responsibility and giving teenagers a sense of self worth. All that would accomplish more than a public enquiry but it too would take time.

Wyllow3 Thu 01-May-25 19:32:55

Iam64

One of the many problems is getting enough evidence to prosecute. It remains the case that in rape/child sexual abuse trials the judge warns the jury of the dangers in convicting o. The unsubstantiated word of the victim. No wonder prosecutions are rare, convictions rarer

It really struck me how hard to get convictions from what you've said.

Iam64 Thu 01-May-25 19:55:58

Wyllow3, I sat through one case where an 11 year old made allegations. At the time she reported, she was an incredibly skinny, anxious, frightened little girl. Two years later it came to court, she had grown tall, gained weight, been well cared for in l.a placement so nothing ‘fancy’. We advised her to out her hair in a pony tail and wear school uniform. Like many 13 year olds she could look older.
Her evidence was superbly delivered. The judges summing up pointed out the burden of proof rests with the prosecution to prove the defendants guilt beyond reasonable doubt . Not Guilty finding. The police officer involved hugged the child, saying I blame myself for this , I know without corroboration, this is likely the result. I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have put you through thud when we all know you’re telling the truth.
It’s complex work. Takes a toll on everyone.

grannimimi Sat 03-May-25 08:58:20

The sheer scale of the numbers (tens of thousands) and the fact it’s still going on makes it so shocking that it’s not a top government priority. It’s about the child victims being protected and getting justice. There is evidence in statements by police and social workers of what is obvious, the children were viewed with same derogatory attitudes as ‘less than’ and responsible for their abuse as the perpetrators and yet officials with such attitudes have never been held accountable. As a child cannot legally be a protitute, it should be an offence to falsely denigrate children in this way. The two tier justice is appalling and these poor, vulnerable children get the worst of it. As a teacher, I think schools could do more to educate children about grooming and to report any instances. They should also have senior staff and a community policeman at the gates of every secondary school at home time . Some do. And yes we do have the resources to make an extra effort to keep the children in our care safe. Any caring teacher would do that. The form teachers could also have circle times for pupils to share experiences and ask them if they feel safe on the way to and from school. Schools could also educate and support parents better on this. The documentary could be shown but in some areas there would need to be community liaison as not all parents accept the victims version and side with perpetrators. However, having small group parent discussions would be valuable so everyone feels heard and parameters for raising children can be agreed. Surely if this was a top government priority a high profile awareness programme could be rolled out across all the agencies in the country and be monitored for effectiveness.