Kemi Badenoch blames 'peasant' immigrants from poor parts of foreign countries for the gro0ming gang abuse in UK

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Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the Conservative Party in the United Kingdom (UK),  has blamed 'peasant' immigrants from poor parts of foreign countries for the gro0ming gang crisis. The Tory leader reaffirmed calls for a national inquiry into the scandal as she suggested problems came from 'sub-communities' within countries that were 'very rural'. In an interview with GB News, Badenoch said 'One is on the perpetrators' side: where do these abusers come from? There's a lot of misinformation, there's a lot of generalisation and many innocent people will end up being grouped in with them,' she said. 'But there is a systematic pattern of behaviour, not even just from one country, but from sub-communities within those countries. People with a particular background, work background. People with a very poor background, a sort of peasant background, very, very rural, almost cut off from even the home origin countries that they might have been in. Asked about the Tory leaders comments, Downing Street said it was not language Sir Keir Starmer would use. The Prime Ministers official spokesman said: Its not the language hes used, or indeed, Id envisage him using. Ms Badenoch has repeatedly clashed with UK prime minister Keir Starmer over calls for a national inquiry. The Government has so far knocked back calls for a national review in favour of locally-led inquiries. Mrs Badenoch said a national inquiry would shine a light on the truth and hold people to account. 'This is about those victims who deserve justice,' she said. The survivors who deserve justice by making sure that every single perpetrator we can find is caught and brought to justice, and those who failed in their duty to protect their children are held to account and exposed. Ms Badenoch's comments came after the Labour MP for Rotherham joined calls for a national inquiry into grooming gangs. Sarah Champion called for a nationwide inquiry that would be led locally and probe the failings of authorities over grooming gangs. She proposed a national 'Telford-style' inquiry rolled out by the Home Office to areas that trigger the threshold for greater scrutiny. The findings would then be fed back to the Home Office for a national response. 'Child sexual abuse is endemic in the UK and needs to be recognised as a national priority,' she said. 'It is clear that the public distrusts governments and authorities when it comes to preventing and prosecuting child abuse, especially child sexual exploitation.' The post Kemi Badenoch blames 'peasant' immigrants from poor parts of foreign countries for the gro0ming gang abuse in UK appeared first on Linda Ikeji Blog.
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