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Saturday 18 October 2014

Arrests following ISIS graffiti incident in Newcastle


This is an update regarding graffiti in the west end of Newcastle.

Police have arrested four people in connection with the damage which was caused sometime overnight between Wednesday, October 8, and Thursday October 9 at locations on the West Road.

Aryan Mahmood Ramadan, 25, of Prospect Place, Newcastle, has been charged with criminal damage and possessing items to cause damage. He will appear before Newcastle Magistrates' Court on November 14.

Three men, aged 36, 29 and 20 have all received a caution.

Read HERE

West Midlands Police report reveals 75 per cent of known on-street child sex groomers are Asian (MUSLIM)

Confidential report also says 82 per cent of victims, aged 14 to 16, are white

A bombshell police report has revealed 75 per cent of known on-street child sex groomers in the West Midlands are Asian – with 82 per cent of victims, aged 14 to 16, being white.

And a Birmingham Mail investigation has discovered how police, councils and social services have been failing vulnerable victims in a new abuse scandal which follows those identified in Rotherham, Rochdale and Derbyshire.

The shocking statistics are contained in a confidential report from West Midlands Police.

Another report identified 111 youngsters at risk of child sexual exploitation in Birmingham last year, with the youngest aged just 11, and almost half of them under 15 years old.

The Children’s Society has also previously warned that vulnerable children were being taken to hotels in the West Midlands and abused by gangs after being plied with drugs and alcohol.

The Mail has discovered how children across the region have been failed by police, councils and social services – with some known offenders not being prosecuted and victims being locked away in secure accommodation to protect them.

The sickening situation was revealed by Birmingham Safeguarding Children Board (BSCB) in a Child Sexual Exploitation (CSE) Prevention and Intervention Strategy published in September 2013. It was sent to partner agencies, including West Midlands Police, but was never issued to the media.

It said: “The partnership arrangements in Birmingham are currently failing to protect our children from child sexual exploitation.

“Perhaps the clearest indicator of this is reflected in that at the time of writing this strategy, there are three young people, the victims of child sexual exploitation, who are subject to a Secure Accommodation Order whilst the perpetrators of these horrific crimes remain at liberty and continue to target other children. The absence of the prosecutions of these offenders is startling.

“Partner inaction may indicate that there is sometimes a reluctance to use the statutory powers available to them, and this is unacceptable.”

But the ethnic make-up of the child sex groomers could cause the biggest controversy, as it seemingly mirrors the problem of Asian gangs targeting young girls in places like Oxford, Rochdale and Rotherham, where an estimated 1,400 children were abused over 16 years after public body failings.


How West Midlands Police and Birmingham City Council are now trying to tackle sickening abuse of young girls

Children's charities playing leading role in fight against child sexual exploitation


A report to Sandwell Safeguarding Children Board (SSCB) last year drew on an official West Midlands Police ‘profile’ – an in-depth intelligence-based report on Child Sexual Exploitation which revealed how the Asian gangs were targeting white girls with on-street grooming.

The force produced the report in 2012, with a sanitised version given to safeguarding boards in the region. Neither the original report nor the sanitised version were placed in the public domain.

A report to SSCB last year referred to the sanitised police version and disclosed for the first time that Asian gangs are preying on young white girls in West Midlands communities through on-street grooming – the term used to describe children in the UK being targeted by men for sexual abuse.

This can be anything from being offered gifts from older boys to being asked to attend ‘parties’ with older men, where they are abused.

The Sandwell Safeguarding report stated: “Intelligence suggests that of potential suspects identified, 75 per cent of those known are of Asian ethnicity.

“This has mirrored other forces’ experiences of known offenders and, as we have seen from the Derbyshire, Lancashire and Rochdale cases, has the potential to impact on trust and confidence within local communities across the West Midlands.”

The report added that 82 per cent of victims were white girls aged between 14 and 16, with 80 per cent having been reported as missing more than once, and 38 per cent having been in care.

At the time of writing its report in September last year, Birmingham Safeguarding Children Board said there were currently 111 young people known to be at risk of grooming and child sexual exploitation.

Two per cent of victims were aged 11; one per cent aged 12; five per cent were 13; 11 per cent aged 14, and 29 per cent were 15. Of the other victims, 21 per cent were aged 16; 24 per cent were 17; six per cent aged 18, and one per cent aged 19.

Yet the BSCB admitted that total abuse numbers could not be calculated.

“Whilst there is some understanding of hot spots, victim profile and trends within Birmingham, the partners do not yet have an adequate understanding of the size of the problem of which the local community is facing with regards to CSE, nor is enough known around the totality around the number of victims and perpetrators,’’ the report said.

“The need to target, prosecute and disrupt those sexual predators who are responsible for the grooming and exploitation of children and young people is paramount.

“Given the under-reported nature of child sexual exploitation, it is crucial that young people, families and carers, professionals and the community share intelligence on perpetrators, no matter how insignificant the information may seem, with the authorities.

“How authorities deal with, analyse and make connections with that perpetrator intelligence is vital, as is the timely feedback to those partners to use that analysis to co-ordinate prevention work, victim safety planning and disruption and prosecution of perpetrators.

“Given the research from the Office of the Children’s Commissioner within CSE and the link with gangs in Birmingham, the interface between CSE screening and referrals into MAGU (Multi-Agency Gang Unit) is crucial.’’

Missing children are more at risk of falling into the clutches of the abusers, the report added, with some estimates saying 80 per cent of victims had been runaways at some point – and almost 40 per cent had been, or were, in care.

The Mail has previously highlighted the problems of children in care repeatedly going missing. In November 2012, we told how children had disappeared from state-run and private care homes almost 6,000 times in four years, including one who had run away 96 times.

We told how Birmingham and other local authorities in the region were breaking Government orders, in place since 2009, by failing to offer all runaways ‘return interviews’ which could have picked up complaints of sexual abuse.

The BSCB report said 216 under 17s were reported missing between April 1 and June 30 last year, adding: “We know that there is a clear link between children who go missing and the risk of child sexual exploitation.”

The full scale of the abuse has not been revealed, but the force said last month that it was currently dealing with 57 live child sexual exploitation cases, 130 suspected cases, and 67 investigations involving online sexual offences against children.

Meanwhile, last autumn, the Children’s Society revealed the organised nature of the grooming gangs.

It said: “Recent high-profile cases of child sexual exploitation – such as in Oxford and Rochdale – have involved children being groomed or exploited in hotels, restaurants and other commercial premises.

“The Children’s Commissioner’s inquiry on child sexual exploitation in groups and gangs last year identified hotels, bed and breakfasts, shops and food outlets as key locations in which abuse takes place.

“A forerunner to the campaign pack was developed in the West Midlands, in response to concerns that the Olympics could see a rise in child sexual exploitation. A number of young people supported by The Children’s Society project in the area mentioned being taken to ‘hotel parties’, where they were given drugs and alcohol and then sexually abused.

“In response, The Children’s Society, West Midlands Police, Coventry Community Safety Team and other local charities contacted hotels in the city and ran awareness-raising sessions for staff.”

If you have been a victim of child sexual exploitation and would like to talk to us in confidence, please email Jeanette Oldham on jeanette.oldham@trinitymirror.com. Or call newsdesk on 0121 234 5536/5564 and ask to speak to Jeanette Oldham.



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SANDWELL

There were said to be 35 young people identified as being at risk of being sexually exploited between April 2012 and March last year. A report to the Safeguarding Board said: “The 35 children were provided with a support plan and targeted intervention to reduce the risk of harm. By improving recognition among professionals in Sandwell it is likely that we will see a significant increase in these numbers.’’



SOLIHULL

A Child Sexual Exploitation steering group conducted a review in January 2014 and identified two postcodes with the highest number of victims – one in the north of the borough. Skipping school was said to be a ‘significant factor’ in known victims.



WALSALL

The average age of children referred to professionals in the last year was between 15 to 17 years old. Between April 2012 and March 2013 there were 14 young people identified as being at risk of or being sexually exploited. They were provided with a ‘‘holistic support plan and targeted intervention to reduce the risk of harm.’’

FAILINGS

Failings have been identified by both BSCB and SSCB. They include:

* Victim safety was either not in place or lacked multi-agency commitment and effective co-ordination;

* Disruption planning focused on victim behaviour not perpetrator behaviour, including using out of area placements and secure accommodation orders;

* Opportunities were missed with regards to sharing information around perpetrators where a prosecution could not be secured, such as the use of civil injunctions and licensing practices;

* There had been a lack of work to tackle peer on peer grooming;

* The use of ‘emotive and blaming language’ between professionals, and

* No Sexual Assault Referral Centre had been provided at the time for children in the West Midlands; in Sandwell, children under 16 are seen in a NHS paediatric outpatient clinic, which is not forensically secure.

Middlesbrough to lead regional migration and asylum seeker project

Comes after town shown to have highest proportion of asylum seekers in England - becoming only place in the country to breach national guidelines



Middlesbrough is to lead a regional project to promote understanding of migration and to support local asylum seeker and refugee networks.

It comes after the town was shown to have the highest proportion of asylum seekers in England - becoming the only place in the country to breach national guidelines, as reported last week by The Gazette.

Discussions between Middlesbrough Council and the Home Office has led to an offer of Government funding for the North East Strategic Migration Partnership.

The decision means Middlesbrough can access £67,000 of Government funding to take the partnership forward until the end of March 2015, but further funding is likely to be made available on an annual basis.

The Government says no local authority area should need to accommodate more than one asylum seeker per 200 of population.

But a Middlesbrough Council report has revealed almost 1,000 asylum seekers are currently being housed in the town - almost one-and-a-half times the Government limit.

Cllr Brenda Thompson, Middlesbrough Council’s Executive member for supporting communities, welcomed the decision saying Middlesbrough will lead the way to give support to asylum seeker and refugee networks.

Read HERE

Saturday 11 October 2014

Graffiti relating to terror group ISIS appears in Newcastle's West End

Messages reading 'Turkish ISIS Supporters' were spray painted onto businesses prompting concern about tensions in the area


Newcastle’s West End was blighted by three graffiti messages that appeared overnight about the terrorist group ISIS.

Business owner Najeb Kosar woke up to find the words ‘Turkish ISIS Supporters’ spray-painted onto an outside wall of his shop on Thursday morning.

It was one of three messages relating to the terrorist organisation, which most recently beheaded British cab driver Alan Henning, that were spotted in the area after they appeared overnight.

The graffiti has been condemned by local residents and campaigners calling for better understanding between Muslims and the wider community.

Najeb, 39, said: “I opened my shop and quite a few people were standing around holding their mouth when they were reading it.”

The shop owner, from Afghanistan, has lived in the area for the last 15 years and said he did not understand why his shop had been defaced with the writing.

He said: “We have no idea why they have written it. I run a business, I’m not in politics. It shouldn’t be anything to do with us.

“I don’t think they have targeted me personally, they are passing on their message to others.”

The shop owner called the police non-emergency number 101 and the message was quickly washed away by Newcastle City Council staff.

But it is unclear whether the building was defaced in an anti-Muslim act or whether it was a pro-ISIS message. One version of the graffiti appeared to read ‘Turkish ISIS supporters. Long life to you’.

Iftikar Akram, owner of NE Smartphones in the area, said he did not understand what the message was trying to achieve.

“I don’t know what that means. Is it other people trying to call the Turkish terrorists? I don’t know the purpose of it,” he said.

But the message has caused concern that tension could develop in the area.

Najeb, who has lived in the area for 15 years, added that he has never seen any trouble in the community.

He said: “It’s a big Muslim community around here, but there are also people from all over Europe. Everyone is nice and friendly, people are living peacefully.”

One man, who did not want to be named, said: “I have lived here eight months and as far as I can see, there is no problem between the Muslim community and the wider community in the West end. But someone is trying to stir up trouble.”

Abu Tayeb KhairDeen, founder of Islamic Diversity, an organisation promoting better understanding of the Islamic faith, said he believed the incident was an anti-Muslim action.

He said the graffiti was a “relatively minor” incident in comparison to some of the most violent aggression he has seen against Muslims but added it could cause problems.

“Most people are disgusted by it, whether they’re Muslims or non-Muslims. It’s uncalled for. It sends a level of intimidation to the local community,” he said.

“It increases tensions in the sense that certainly some of the youth may feel they need to retaliate. There’s a possibility of backlash.”

He added that those who spray-painted the message had engaged in criminal activity and should be brought to justice.

Northumbria Police is now carrying out enquiries about the graffiti.

Neighbourhood Inspector Barrie Joisce said: “Graffiti not only causes an issue for individuals but it impacts on wider communities, particularly when it’s sprayed in places which are passed daily by the public.

“It’s an eyesore and a criminal offence and offenders could find themselves in court. I’d urge anyone who recognises tags or has information about those involved in graffiti in the area to get in touch with police so we can investigate.”

Read HERE