White working class girls traded for sex, says Telford MP
- Published
Vulnerable white working class girls are being traded for sex in a "routine way" an MP has told ministers.
Conservative politician Lucy Allan addressed fellow politicians in the wake of reports claiming up to 1,000 children could have been targeted in her Telford constituency.
Ms Allan said the cases would not have happened had the victims been from different backgrounds.
Calls are growing for a fresh inquiry into sex abuse in the Shropshire town.
Speaking at a Westminster Hall debate, Ms Allan said the girls had "multiple vulnerabilities".
Victims 'miscast'
Telford has found itself in the spotlight after the Sunday Mirror published a report about "groups of mainly Asian men" targeting vulnerable white teenagers in the town, external since the 1980s.
A lawyer who led prosecutions against one child sex abuse ring in Telford has said those cases were the "tip of the iceberg".
Ms Allan said the girls were targeted because of their backgrounds.
"It is also why so often they are miscast as bringing it on themselves, they are miscast as indulging in risky behaviour, as being promiscuous, as somehow being to blame for what is happening to them," she said.
"In their own minds, so often they also internalise that sense that they are somehow at fault."
Ms Allan said she was concerned difficult family backgrounds led authorities to see victims as "troublemakers" who were "too difficult" to deal with.
"Maybe that's why these crimes were not identified for quite so long," she said.
"Had those girls been from a different background, had they been able to articulate more clearly what it was that was happening to them, had they been able to identify that it was a crime then I think perhaps we would not have the cases that we're seeing in Telford, in Rotherham, in Oxford.
"How did it happen that our young girls are being traded for sex in what is becoming a routine way?
"Whether it's from takeaways or taxis or betting shops, it's happening in our streets."
'Strong women'
Meanwhile, the country's top child protection officer said "difficult cultural questions" needed to be asked about the type of abuse seen in Telford.
Addressing a Home Affairs Select Committee, Chief Constable Simon Bailey asked: "What culturally drives this? What culturally permits the type of abuse that we are seeing in that particular offending model?"
Ms Allan has previously called for a Rotherham-style inquiry into the allegations.
Council leader and Labour Councillor Shaun Davies, who previously said a national review chaired by Alexis Jay would suffice, has backed Ms Allan's plea.
Justice Minister Phillip Lee praised Ms Allan for her contribution, and said "strong women" in this area were needed to provide "leadership that is desperately required".
He added: "Child sexual abuse is, I think, the worst of all crimes."
Mr Lee said he had written a theses on "the psychology of the child sex offender" in the early 90s, and had been "somewhat sceptical" of estimates in textbooks about the extent of such offences across the UK.
"Sadly, that academic literature has turned out to be more accurate than I can ever have imagined," he said.
Operation Chalice
Seven men were jailed in 2012 as part of West Mercia Police's Operation Chalice, including brothers Ahdel Ali and Mubarek Ali.
The force said more than 100 girls could have been targeted by the gang between 2007 and 2009.
Many of the seven men worked for or had connections with fast food restaurants across Telford.
Victims as young as 13 were plied with drugs and alcohol and sold for sex by men who posed as their boyfriends.
The men initially won the girls' trust by giving them presents such as mobile phones in an "almost boyfriend-girlfriend scenario", police said.
Speaking in 2013, Det Ch Insp Neil Jamieson said: "It then spiralled into them being shared with other men."
The girls were moved around the country for the purposes of sexual exploitation, he added.
Mubarek Ali was released in November last year after serving about five years behind bars. He was banned from returning to Telford and Shrewsbury.
MP for Rotherham, Sarah Champion, was among those who welcomed Ms Allan's speech.
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The Labour politician added: "As a country we all need to take responsibility for protecting children and preventing abuse in every form it takes."
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