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Baroness Louise Casey’s latest report on group-based sexual exploitation is a scathing indictment of the systemic failures that have allowed such heinous crimes to persist unchecked in our society. The report does not mince words in highlighting the long-standing issues that have plagued efforts to combat this form of exploitation at all levels.
For survivors of abuse, the pressing question now is whether Baroness Casey’s report will finally lead to tangible and meaningful change. The government has pledged to implement all of the report’s recommendations, but the reality is that many of these issues have been known for years without any decisive action being taken to address them.
One of the key criticisms highlighted in the report is the tendency to blame the victims, particularly the children who have been subjected to abuse. Baroness Casey pointed out that if the authorities had taken a different approach years ago, viewing these girls as victims rather than complicit in their abuse, we might not find ourselves in the current dire situation.
A recurring theme in past reports, including Baroness Casey’s own investigation in 2015, is the failure to tackle grooming gangs effectively. Many of the same issues have been raised time and again, signaling a systemic failure to learn from past mistakes. The government’s commitment to better data collection on the ethnicity of grooming gang suspects is a step in the right direction, but the real test will be in translating these recommendations into concrete actions to prevent further exploitation
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