
Grooming gangs inquiry ‘must not delay action' against child abuse, says NSPCC
The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) said it is 'pleased' with the decision – but added that a full national probe 'must not delay' urgent Government action.
'We are pleased to see the Prime Minister engaging with the recommendations set out in the Casey Review and will also read it line by line when it is published,' NSPCC chief executive Chris Sherwood said.
'But a national inquiry into abuse by organised networks must not delay urgent action on child sexual abuse that is long overdue.
'Survivors have already waited more than two years for the important recommendations from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) to be implemented,' Mr Sherwood added.
The IICSA, chaired by Professor Alexis Jay, found institutional failings and tens of thousands of victims across England and Wales.
The seven-year probe made 20 recommendations in the final report published in 2022, as it described child sexual abuse as an 'epidemic' across the two nations.
Earlier this year, the Government dismissed calls for a public inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal, saying its focus was on putting in place the outstanding recommendations already made in the IICSA.
Mr Sherwood said the Government now has the opportunity to make tackling child sexual abuse 'a non-negotiable priority'.
'Child sexual abuse and exploitation by groups of offenders is deeply insidious and devastates lives,' he said.
'Now is the moment for this Government to take concerted action by making child safeguarding a non-negotiable priority.
'This means joined up work to prevent child sexual abuse across all public, private, and voluntary sector agencies and mandatory training so all those working with children can identify the signs of abuse, step in and stop offenders in their tracks.
'Most of all it means supporting victims and survivors by investing in life-changing therapeutic and recovery services and ensuring the justice system can cope with the current backlog of child sexual abuse cases in court.'
Following the Prime Minister's announcement on Saturday, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described the move as a 'welcome U-turn', while Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch called on him to apologise for 'six wasted months'.
'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,' she said.
'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.'
Speaking to reporters on Saturday while on his visit to Canada, Sir Keir said: '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.
'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.'
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Scottish Sun
5 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Major crackdown on migrants working illegally as firms will be given locations of asylum hotels to axe riders' accounts
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) MIGRANT hotel locations will be handed to delivery firm bosses to stop illegal riders using their apps. The Home Office has struck a deal with Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats in a major win for The Sun. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Hot-spots for delivery riders working illegally will be flagged up for raids to immigration enforcement officers Credit: Ray Collins 3 A masked rider challenges an immigration enforcement officer about his rights Credit: Chris Eades 3 Officers speak to a migrant delivery rider We revealed asylum seekers were raking in up to £1,000 a week within days of arriving in Britain. They are not legally allowed to work but have used shared accounts to dodge checks. Last night PM Sir Keir Starmer said: 'The Sun has rightly put the spotlight on migrants working illegally as food delivery riders. "And we're tackling the problem. If a rider is staying at this accommodation, the companies will know and can close down the rider's account. 'We will do what it takes to uphold the law and to ensure fairness for the British people.' Under the agreement, hot-spots for such riders will be flagged up for raids by to immigration enforcement officers. And delivery companies — who insist that they are already investing heavily in security systems to prevent abuse — will be hauled in again in the coming weeks to give updates on what progress they have made. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: 'Illegal working undermines honest business, exploits vulnerable individuals and fuels organised immigration crime. 'By enhancing our data-sharing with delivery companies, we are taking decisive action to close loopholes and increase enforcement.' Last month we revealed how more than 20 cops in body armour swooped on the Thistle City Barbican hotel in central London after our investigation revealed migrants living there were working illegally. Undercover delivery driver investigation But the migrants were allowed to return to their taxpayer-funded rooms after being questioned. Tory Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'It shouldn't take a Sun investigation to get the Government to finally take action. 'It is disgraceful that rampant illegal working has been taking place on an industrial scale at the very hotels Yvette Cooper is responsible for running. 'This is all a consequence of the Government's complete failure to control our borders. 'All illegal immigrants need to be removed immediately to their country of origin or another safe country. 'Then, the crossings would soon stop.' Labour is also planning to tighten the law, forcing gig economy firms to carry out full right-to-work checks on anyone using their platforms. And, from today, the Government is ramping up pressure on the criminals fuelling the migrant crisis. 'Plans in place to stop the gangs' By Sir Keir Starmer WE will stop at nothing to tackle illegal migration. So this week we have delivered a world first: a new sanctions regime to target the vile people-smuggling gangs. We will go after the gang leaders, those supplying boats and fake passports, and the moneymen. Their assets will be frozen. Their bank accounts will be closed. And they will be banned from the UK. We've already returned 35,000 people — way up on the year before. We're working with Germany to close a legal loophole there, allowing police to seize small boats being stored and transported in their country. By working with France, we have agreed to a totally unprecedented returns pilot. We're also taking a zero-tolerance approach to the illegal jobs which gangs promise. Under our nationwide crackdown, raids and arrests are already up 50 per cent. The Sun has rightly put the spotlight on migrants working illegally as food delivery riders. We will share asylum accommodation locations with Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats. If a rider is staying at this accommodation, the firms will know and can close down their account. We will do what it takes to uphold the law and to ensure fairness for the British people. Leaders of smuggling gangs, peddlers of fake passports and corrupt officials will be named and shamed. The first wave – expected to number around two dozen offenders – will include travel bans, asset freezes, and restrictions on access to the UK financial system. Meanwhile the Sun can reveal the Thistle City Hotel, one of the capital's biggest asylum accommodation locations, is still being used as a base for illegal riders. When The Sun returned yesterday it appeared nothing had changed — as a steady stream of migrants came and went in full delivery rider gear from a fenced-off area put up to hide them from public view. We previously revealed that owners the Clermont Hotel Group, headed by CEO Gavin Taylor, had raked in £28million in revenue since taking on asylum seekers in November 2021. But at the same time residents of a block of apartments across the road fear the value of their homes has plummeted. One, who moved in 15 years ago, told The Sun: 'It is just constant noise, every day and every night. 'They all work. 'The police are here constantly. 'It's annoying a lot of residents in the block. 'I put my place on the market last year but nothing happened and I ended up taking it off the market because I had a newborn. Staff don't quiz 'kids' SMALL boat migrants who claim to be children are being given the benefit of the doubt by staff. A report by borders inspector David Bolt found that immigration workers show a 'lack of curiosity'. An Iranian with grey hairs and black stubble had his age claim of 17 accepted despite being assessed as 22. AI technology is set to be rolled out in 2026 which can accurately assess a person's age. Last year half of the 'children' were really adults. 'I'm not against people coming here for a better life. 'And obviously asylum seekers need to be somewhere. 'But if the hotel closed it would make the area a lot better. 'I'm sure the people who own the hotel are doing really well, funded by the Home Office while we pay our service charge and our taxes.' And a 27-year-old city finance worker said the problem had 'got a lot worse' since he moved in at the start of the year. He said: 'We went over there to try to get information on how long it would be a migrant hotel. 'We were pretty much kicked out straight away. 'They said they understand the problems but once the residents are on the street, they have no control.' The owner of a coffee shop said customers were staying away and his business had been broken into three times. He added: 'I pay £8,000 every three months in taxes and business rates. 'If the hotel closed down I am sure business would improve.'


Times
33 minutes ago
- Times
Rachel Reeves warned that deregulation risks financial crisis
The governor of the Bank of England has warned Rachel Reeves that cutting red tape on the banking sector risks sparking another financial crisis as he downplayed the rise in UK government debt costs. Andrew Bailey told a group of influential MPs on Tuesday that rolling back restrictions on the City and ditching bank ringfencing guidelines could destabilise the UK financial system and 'would not be [a] sensible' decision for the time being. In a near two-hour long session with the Treasury select committee before the parliamentary summer recess, Bailey also said that the rise in long-term government debt costs was not 'unique' to the UK. He said investors were ditching US assets to curb their exposure to the dollar owing to concerns about the economy since President Trump returned to the White House. The governor, who, alongside his role at the central bank, recently took up the chairmanship of the Financial Stability Board, said he could understand why some people would think that 'the financial crisis is now way in the past, we've got past that, that's all solved, that's all out of the way, move on'. However, he said that 'for those of us who were veterans of sorting the problems of [the financial crisis] out' there remained a live threat to financial stability which required lawmakers to retain robust regulations. His comments come after the chancellor told bankers at the annual Mansion House dinner this month that the UK's regulatory regime was a 'boot on the neck' of businesses which risked 'choking [them] off'. Bailey, 66, said he would not have used such phrasing. Reeves announced that the government would reform laws that require lenders to separate their retail and investment banking businesses, a requirement put in place after the 2008 global financial crisis to shield depositors from banks' riskier activities. Several City grandees, including Sir John Vickers, the architect of the ringfencing rules, have expressed concern at the government's deregulation drive, which is intended to reverse weak economic growth. Bailey also downplayed the rise in UK government borrowing costs and said that it was part of a worldwide trend created by Trump's volatile tariff policymaking and a general rise in public deficit spending. 'We've seen an increase in term premium in government bond markets… yield curves have steepened', Bailey said, adding this was 'a global phenomenon, it is not in any sense unique [to the UK]'. The rate on the 30-year UK government bond, or gilt, stands at 5.43 per cent, up from 4.67 per cent compared to a year ago. The yield, which moves inversely to prices, on the US equivalent has risen to 4.93 per cent from 4.48 per cent over the same period. Bailey's comments come as figures from the Office for National Statistics on Tuesday showed that UK debt interest spending jumped to £16.4 billion in June, the second-highest for that month since the records began in 1997. Government borrowing topped £20 billion in the month also, above the Office for Budget Responsibility's projection for the month, strengthening expectations for tax increases at the autumn budget. Trump's erratic decision-making on how much to tax imports from specific countries had led to 'rebalancing' among markets 'which involves a reduction in exposure to dollar assets', Bailey said. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six comparable currencies, is down nearly 10 per cent since the start of the year. The governor said that, judging by conversations with market participants and based on granular data, 'the most crowded trade in the market at the moment is short dollar'. He said that since Trump first announced his 'reciprocal tariffs' in April, there had been 'a breakdown in established correlations in markets'. Stock markets globally jolted lower in the immediate aftermath of Trump's first tariff announcements, with the S&P 500 index posting one of its largest losses since the Great Depression. However, an equity rally has since pushed several indices to a record high. This week, the FTSE 100 closed at its highest-ever level of just over 9,000 points. Taxes on goods imported to the US from most countries will increase sharply from August 1 after Trump delayed the implementation of his 'reciprocal tariffs' several times.


Telegraph
36 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Channel migrant crossings to double if Starmer crackdown fails
The number of illegal migrants crossing the Channel is forecast to double this year unless new government measures can curb the flow, independent modelling shows. The research by Richard Wood, one of Britain's top modelling forecasters, takes account of not only weather and sea conditions but also includes asylum grant rates, illegal immigration flows into Europe and dinghy size. His analysis, originally based on five years of data up to the end of 2024, has been accurate in forecasting the numbers reaching the UK so far this year based on 'favourable' weather conditions. More than 23,000 migrants have reached the UK this year, the highest in the first six months of any year since the first arrivals in 2018, which is nearly exactly what Mr Wood's good weather model predicted. He has now updated his analysis, based on the latest asylum grant rates, increasing dinghy size and immigration flows into the EU, and re-run the modelling based on weather data over the past 16 years. The data suggest that unless Sir Keir Starmer is successful in his attempt to stop the people smugglers, migrant crossings will rocket this year. The Prime Minister has negotiated a 'one in,one out' deal with the French by which illegal migrants coming to the UK will be swapped for people who are able to come here legally. If the weather is as good as it was in 2024, when there was a surge in crossings in the second half of the year, then the total number reaching the UK by the end of 2025 will be 44,628, according to Mr Wood's model. This is just below the number of migrant arrivals in 2022, the highest on record, when 45,774 migrants crossed the Channel in small boats. If, however, the weather is as bad as it was in the second half of 2023, then the total number crossing will be as low as 36,965. This would still be the second highest total on record. The data provide a benchmark against which the Government's new policy measures could be judged to establish if they have an effect on reducing the crossings. Mr Wood said: 'With the 37th UK-France Summit including various deterrent and enforcement pledges for reducing small-boat crossings, these predictions may serve as a useful benchmark against which progress can be assessed.' As well as the 'one in, one out' deal struck with Sir Keir, France is preparing to introduce tougher tactics where officers from an elite police unit will intercept the people smugglers' boats at sea within 300 metres of the coast in an attempt to stop them leaving the coast. They have also been experimenting with jet skis laying nets to snag the dinghies' propellers. Last week, Sir Keir secured a pledge from Friedrich Merz, the Germany's chancellor, that the country would introduce a new law by the end of the year to enable police to seize boats for use by people smugglers in the Channel. The model, which is currently being peer-reviewed for publication in a migration journal, draws on data from sources including the Met Office, Channel Coastal Observatory, Home Office and European Border and Coast Guard Agency. It predicts the daily number of small-boat migrant arrivals for scenarios based on weather and sea conditions, EU illegal immigration, and other factors which may have a deterrent effect. It has two parts: the first that estimates the probability of a day being 'viable', and the second that estimates the number of migrant arrivals on such viable days. Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said: 'What we already know for sure is that 2025 to date has been the worst year in history for illegal immigrants crossing the channel – it's up 50 per cent versus last year. 'The Government's laughable claim to smash the gangs lies in tatters. Now they think that confiscating mobile phones and sending a tiny number of people to France will make a difference 'Only a removals deterrent will end this madness – where every illegal immigrant is immediately removed upon arrival to their country of origin or to a safe third country. But Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer are too weak to do that.'