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Child sex abuse: U.K. proposes tougher penalties

The British government has unveiled tougher measures to combat child sexual abuse after a series of scathing reports over recent months revealed widespread exploitation of girls in several areas.

5-year jail terms, unlimited fines proposed after 'Indescribably awful' attacks

British child sex abuse scandal

10 years ago
Duration 2:50
Prime Minister David Cameron has unveiled tough new measures to combat child sexual exploitation

The British government has unveiled tougher measures to combat child sexual abuseafter a series of scathing reports over recent months revealed widespread exploitation of girls in several areas across England.

Along with ordering police to treat child sexual abuse as a national threat, the new proposals make it a criminal offence to "wilfully neglect" victims and people at risk.

They include jail terms of up to five years for teachers, counsellors and social workers who fail to protect children, as well as unlimited fines for individuals and organizations proven to have turned a blind eye to child sexual abuse.

"We owe it to our children, and to the children who survive horrific sexual abuse, to do better and ensure the mistakes of the past are never repeated again," Prime Minister David Cameron said in astatement posted on his website.

It's a little bit of hope. We are finally moving forward.- Emma Jackson, sexual abuse survivor

The new measures were announced ahead of a summit on child sexual exploitation held at Downing Street on Tuesday.

The summit was held just hours after areport was released by the Oxfordshire Child Safeguarding Board which found that nearly 400 girls may have suffered "indescribably awful" sexual abuse across the region over 16 years.

Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron has unveiled tough new measures to combat child sexual exploitation. He is holding a summit on the issue on March 3. (Stefan Wermuth/Reuters)

The Oxfordshire report is just the latest in a series that have highlightedchild sexual abuse in various towns across England.

One of the most shocking, released in the summer of 2014,found that about 1,400 girls had been sexually abused in the small Yorkshire town of Rotherham from 1997 to 2013.

In most cases, the girls, some as young as 11, were targeted by gangs of Pakistani-heritage men who gave themdrugs and alcohol. The reportincluded horrific stories of physical and sexual abuse, including examples of girls being doused in gasoline and threatened with being set on fire.

Other victims were forced to witness violent rapes of other girls along with being raped themselves.

Bothreports found that police and social workers failed to protect the children, many of whom were in social care.

Children were ignored, sometimes even blamed, and issues were swept under the carpet.- Prime Minister David Cameron

Their findingsshowed that authorities often blamed the victims for their own abuse and neglected the serious nature of their claims.

"The overall problem was not grasping the nature of the abuse the grooming, the pull from home, the erosion of consent, the inability to escape and the sheer horror of what the girls were going through but of seeing it as something done more voluntarily.

"Something that the girls did as opposed to something done to them," the Oxfordshire report said.

The revelation that 1,400 girls had been abused in Rotherham over 16 years sparked outrage across the U.K. The majority of the abuse was carried out by Pakistani-heritage men. (Pascal Leblond/CBC)

The government says the new measures are designed to prevent similar neglect by people responsible forprotecting children in the future.

"We have all been appalled at the abuse Children were ignored, sometimes even blamed, and issues were swept under the carpet," Camerons statement said. "The culture of denial which let them down so badly must be eradicated."

Some critics argue the new proposals dont go far enough.

They say that rather than making a criminal offence to "wilfully neglect" victims, the government should introduce legislation requiring mandatory reporting ofchild sexual abuse, arguing that wilful neglect is too hard to prove.

Still, some victims say that after years of being ignored by authorities, they are relieved the government is taking action.

"Its a little bit of hope," said Emma Jackson (not her real name), whose teenage years were marred by brutal sexual abuse at the hands of dozens of men in Rotherham. "We are finally moving forward."