MP reads testimony on grooming gangs; victims allege mass abuse

Digital Desk

MP reads testimony on grooming gangs; victims allege mass abuse

MP Rupert Lowe read inquiry testimony on grooming gangs, alleging mass abuse and threats. Calls grow for transparency and stronger safeguarding.

British MP Rupert Lowe cites inquiry evidence calling for action on grooming gangs

 British Conservative MP Rupert Lowe told the Commons on June 1 that harrowing testimony from a recent two-week inquiry into grooming gangs shows organised child sexual exploitation across the country, including accounts of mass rape, coercion and threats. Lowe urged that the material be made public and pressed for stronger institutional accountability.

What MPs heard
According to officials and excerpts read in Parliament, victims described being drugged, passed between men, and threatened with death or harm to family members if they reported abuse. One witness told investigators she was sexually exploited between ages 13 and 16 and alleged abuse by “hundreds” of men; others spoke of physical violence, racial slurs and intimidation used to control victims.

Lowe said the inquiry had identified evidence of organised abuse in at least 85 local authority areas. “These are not isolated cases — the testimonies suggest patterns of grooming, trafficking and coordinated assault,” he told fellow MPs during the speech. Sources familiar with the inquiry said some accounts named local professionals and alleged failures by agencies to act.

Scale and claims
Initial reports indicate the inquiry assembled testimony from dozens of survivors and other witnesses over two weeks. Lowe described cases in which victims were groomed through gifts and drugs, then coerced into sexual activity and moved between perpetrators. He also read allegations that some offenders used religion or ethnicity to justify targeting non-Muslim girls while claiming Muslim girls were treated differently.

The MP additionally cited testimony alleging sexual assault by police officers in separate incidents, and said such claims pointed to wider institutional shortcomings. “Where there were openings for authority figures to protect children, they were sometimes closed,” he said, according to parliamentary records.

Background: the grooming gangs issue
The term grooming gangs refers to groups engaged in organised sexual exploitation of children and teenagers. Investigations since the 1990s have revealed multiple cases across British towns and cities, leading to prosecutions, reviews and public inquiries. The issue has long been politically sensitive because of debates about the ethnic backgrounds of some convicted offenders and accusations that institutions failed victims.

Previous high-profile cases, including the Rochdale and Rotherham prosecutions, prompted national outrage and government-led reviews. Campaigners say those cases exposed systemic failures by social services, police and councils; critics warn against conflating individual criminality with entire communities.

Official response and next steps
A Home Office spokesperson said the government takes all allegations of child sexual exploitation “extremely seriously” and that local policing and safeguarding bodies must investigate claims fully. Police forces contacted for comment said they would not discuss details of the inquiry’s evidence but reiterated established procedures for reporting historic abuse and supporting victims.

The inquiry’s organisers have not yet published the full witness statements read in Parliament. Sources familiar with the matter said legal and privacy concerns — including protecting identities of survivors and ongoing investigations — are likely factors in any decision about wider disclosure.

Impact on victims and communities
Survivors’ accounts read by Lowe have already prompted calls from victims’ groups for a comprehensive national review and clearer lines of accountability. Campaigners told reporters they want greater transparency on how past complaints were handled and stronger victim support services, including trauma-informed counselling and long-term assistance.

At the local level, councils and safeguarding partnerships may face renewed scrutiny over past decisions, while police chiefs could be asked to justify earlier investigative choices. Community leaders urged sensitivity, warning that coverage must avoid stigmatizing entire ethnic or religious groups while ensuring perpetrators are held to account.

What to expect next
Parliamentary debate is likely to continue, with MPs from several parties signalling interest in pressing for publication of the inquiry’s full findings or a fuller parliamentary probe. Lawmakers may also pursue measures to tighten safeguarding rules and improve inter-agency data-sharing.

For now, survivors’ testimonies have refocused attention on grooming gangs and institutional responses to child sexual exploitation. Officials say investigations and referrals continue, and they urged anyone with information to contact local police or national helplines.

 

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03 Jun 2026 By Abhishek Joshi

MP reads testimony on grooming gangs; victims allege mass abuse

Digital Desk

British MP Rupert Lowe cites inquiry evidence calling for action on grooming gangs

 British Conservative MP Rupert Lowe told the Commons on June 1 that harrowing testimony from a recent two-week inquiry into grooming gangs shows organised child sexual exploitation across the country, including accounts of mass rape, coercion and threats. Lowe urged that the material be made public and pressed for stronger institutional accountability.

What MPs heard
According to officials and excerpts read in Parliament, victims described being drugged, passed between men, and threatened with death or harm to family members if they reported abuse. One witness told investigators she was sexually exploited between ages 13 and 16 and alleged abuse by “hundreds” of men; others spoke of physical violence, racial slurs and intimidation used to control victims.

Lowe said the inquiry had identified evidence of organised abuse in at least 85 local authority areas. “These are not isolated cases — the testimonies suggest patterns of grooming, trafficking and coordinated assault,” he told fellow MPs during the speech. Sources familiar with the inquiry said some accounts named local professionals and alleged failures by agencies to act.

Scale and claims
Initial reports indicate the inquiry assembled testimony from dozens of survivors and other witnesses over two weeks. Lowe described cases in which victims were groomed through gifts and drugs, then coerced into sexual activity and moved between perpetrators. He also read allegations that some offenders used religion or ethnicity to justify targeting non-Muslim girls while claiming Muslim girls were treated differently.

The MP additionally cited testimony alleging sexual assault by police officers in separate incidents, and said such claims pointed to wider institutional shortcomings. “Where there were openings for authority figures to protect children, they were sometimes closed,” he said, according to parliamentary records.

Background: the grooming gangs issue
The term grooming gangs refers to groups engaged in organised sexual exploitation of children and teenagers. Investigations since the 1990s have revealed multiple cases across British towns and cities, leading to prosecutions, reviews and public inquiries. The issue has long been politically sensitive because of debates about the ethnic backgrounds of some convicted offenders and accusations that institutions failed victims.

Previous high-profile cases, including the Rochdale and Rotherham prosecutions, prompted national outrage and government-led reviews. Campaigners say those cases exposed systemic failures by social services, police and councils; critics warn against conflating individual criminality with entire communities.

Official response and next steps
A Home Office spokesperson said the government takes all allegations of child sexual exploitation “extremely seriously” and that local policing and safeguarding bodies must investigate claims fully. Police forces contacted for comment said they would not discuss details of the inquiry’s evidence but reiterated established procedures for reporting historic abuse and supporting victims.

The inquiry’s organisers have not yet published the full witness statements read in Parliament. Sources familiar with the matter said legal and privacy concerns — including protecting identities of survivors and ongoing investigations — are likely factors in any decision about wider disclosure.

Impact on victims and communities
Survivors’ accounts read by Lowe have already prompted calls from victims’ groups for a comprehensive national review and clearer lines of accountability. Campaigners told reporters they want greater transparency on how past complaints were handled and stronger victim support services, including trauma-informed counselling and long-term assistance.

At the local level, councils and safeguarding partnerships may face renewed scrutiny over past decisions, while police chiefs could be asked to justify earlier investigative choices. Community leaders urged sensitivity, warning that coverage must avoid stigmatizing entire ethnic or religious groups while ensuring perpetrators are held to account.

What to expect next
Parliamentary debate is likely to continue, with MPs from several parties signalling interest in pressing for publication of the inquiry’s full findings or a fuller parliamentary probe. Lawmakers may also pursue measures to tighten safeguarding rules and improve inter-agency data-sharing.

For now, survivors’ testimonies have refocused attention on grooming gangs and institutional responses to child sexual exploitation. Officials say investigations and referrals continue, and they urged anyone with information to contact local police or national helplines.

 

https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/special-news/mp-reads-testimony-on-grooming-gangs-victims-allege-mass-abuse/article-19634

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