The public must “keep calm” over the ethnicity of grooming gang offenders, the author of a high-profile report has urged, saying police data from one region suggested race was proportional with the local population.
The comments from Louise Casey came asKemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, defended herself from claims that she was attempting to politicise the scandal of the organised rape of girls by men across dozens of towns over at least 25 years.
Lady Casey’s reporton Monday found evidence of “over-representation” of Asian and Pakistani heritage men among suspects of “group sexual exploitation” of children, according to data from three police forces.
Casey told MPs on Tuesday that she was concerned that the limited data available on the race and ethnicity of offenders was not being used responsibly as part of the public debate on grooming gangs.
She said the report examined data fromGreater Manchesterpolice (GMP), which covers towns including Rochdale and Oldham where convicted grooming gangs operated.
“If you look at the data on child exploitation, suspects and offenders, it is disproportionately Asian heritage,” she said. “If you look at the data for child abuse, it is not disproportionate and it is white men.
“So just a note to everybody, outside here rather than in here, let’s just keep calm about how you interrogate data and what you get from it.”
According to the report, GMP’s figures showed that 52% of suspects involved in multi-victim/multi-offender cases of child sexual exploitation over a three-year period were Asian, compared with 38% who were white.
When examining suspects for all child sex abuse crimes, not just grooming, the same force’s data shows that 16% were Asian and 44% were white, while 32% of suspects were of “unknown” ethnicity.
The last census figures show that 57% of Greater Manchester is white and 21% is Asian, according to the report.
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Casey told the BBC’s Newsnight on Monday that she was “disappointed” by the Conservatives’ response to her review of the grooming gangs scandal. “We need to change some laws, we need to do a national criminal investigation, we need to get on with a national inquiry with local footprint in it, and ideally wouldn’t it be great if everybody came behind that and backed you?” she said.
“I felt the opposition could have just been a bit, you know, ‘Yes we will all come together behind you.’ Maybe there’s still time to do that. I think it’s just so important that they do.”
At a hastily arranged press conference, Badenoch said she was “not doing politics now” but criticised people who sought to “tone police those who are pointing out when something has gone wrong”.
“I do think that we should take the politics out of it. But who was it that said when we raised this issue that we were pandering to the far right? That’s what brought the politics into it,” she said.
Badenoch said her party backed a national inquiry into the scandal and had been calling for one “for six months”.
The home secretary,Yvette Cooper, told MPs that officials had dodged the issue of ethnicity among groups of sex offenders for fear of being labelled racist, and called for “much more robust national data”.
A Downing Street spokesperson said the format and chair of the inquiry would be set out at a later date, adding that it would have the power to compel people to give evidence.