tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post8559502804412009608..comments2024-03-27T15:36:44.737-07:00Comments on Haq's Musings: Can British Pakistani Humza Yousaf Lead Scotland to Independence? Riaz Haqhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comBlogger14125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-39493331211729222682023-05-30T21:52:47.352-07:002023-05-30T21:52:47.352-07:00Why Pakistani students benefit the most from going...Why Pakistani students benefit the most from going to university<br /><br />https://theconversation.com/why-pakistani-students-benefit-the-most-from-going-to-university-158088<br /><br />By Beth Daley<br />Editor and GM<br /><br />The benefits are especially large for (British) Pakistani students, with an estimated boost to average earnings of more than a third by age 30. Adding up predicted gains over the whole life cycle and taking into account taxes and student loans, we found that doing a degree is worth around £200,000 for Pakistani students – around twice the average return for all students we calculated in previous work.<br /><br />This is not because Pakistani graduates have especially high earnings. In fact, the opposite is true: Pakistani graduates have the lowest graduate earnings of all ethnic groups, with typical earnings at age 30 of £23,000 for men and £19,000 for women.<br /><br />How The Conversation is different: We explain without oversimplifying.<br />Learn more<br />Instead the reason is that – based on comparing similar people who did and didn’t go to university – Pakistani graduates would have earned much less had they not gone to university. Typical earnings at age 30 of Pakistani men and women who did not go to university are only £13,000 for men and £11,000 for women.<br /><br />An important factor explaining the large earnings gains for Pakistani graduates (compared to not attending university) appears to be that Pakistani students are more likely than White British students to choose subjects with good job prospects at university, such as business, law, or pharmacology. They are also less likely to choose degrees with low or negative financial returns, such as creative arts.<br /><br /><br /><br />These findings appear to contradict a claim in the government’s recent race commission report. According to the report, an explanation for the low graduate earnings of many ethnic minority groups is that “ethnic minority students, and especially Black students, from lower social status backgrounds are not being well advised on which courses to take at university”.<br /><br />Our findings suggest that the opposite is true for South Asian students, as they tend to study more lucrative subjects than white students. We also find no evidence that black students choose lower-return subjects than white students. This does not mean that poor career advice is not a problem – but it doesn’t seem to affect ethnic minorities disproportionately.<br /><br />The government’s report also suggests that ethnic minorities have low graduate earnings because they attend less selective universities. It is true that students from ethnic minorities – especially black students – are more likely to attend lower tariff universities, and that graduates of these institutions earn less than other graduates.<br /><br />But importantly, this does not mean that these universities offer low returns. Many graduates of these institutions would have had much lower earnings still if they had not gone to university at all. Overall, we found no evidence that ethnic minorities’ institution choices lower their gains from attending university.Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-59635716456447165992023-05-25T07:50:52.572-07:002023-05-25T07:50:52.572-07:00British Pakistani billionaire Anwar Pervez has a n...British Pakistani billionaire Anwar Pervez has a net worth of £3.1 billion.<br /><br />Born in Rawalpindi, Pervez moved to the UK when he was 21 years old. He became a bus conductor in Bradford, working seven days a week and earning up to £18.<br /><br />This eventually led to Pervez opening up his first convenience store, Kashmir, for the Muslim community in London.<br /><br />https://www.desiblitz.com/content/pakistani-billionaires-living-in-the-uk#:~:text=The%20most%20popular%20and%20successful,earning%20up%20to%20%C2%A318.Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-65420280173925330352023-05-23T12:47:58.573-07:002023-05-23T12:47:58.573-07:00#British #Pakistani elected Mayor of #Bolton, #UK....#British #Pakistani elected Mayor of #Bolton, #UK. Ayub was born in the small village of Ghora, Kotli, Azad #Kashmir. He came from #Pakistan to Bolton in 1972 at age 15. He worked #textile mills, #manufacturing & transport sector & local gov't<br />https://www.bolton.gov.uk/councillors-mayor/mayor#:~:text=The%20Mayor%20of%20Bolton%20for,1972%20at%20the%20age%2015.<br /><br />Ayub was born in the small village of Ghora, Kotli, Azad Kashmir. He came to live in Bolton in 1972 at the age 15.<br /><br />Ayub has worked in various sectors including Textile mills, manufacturing, commercial and later in the transport sector and local government for last 40 years.<br /><br />Ayub was elected to Bolton Council in 2006 and has represented Great Lever Ward for the last 17 years. He has served as Vice Chairman of the Planning Committee, Cabinet member for Highways & Transport, Audit, Corporate and Place scrutiny Committee. He has also served as a Governor of Bolton Islamic Girls School.<br /><br />Mohammed Ayub will be the first Bolton Mayor of Kashmiri origin and is exceptionally proud to be Bolton’s First Citizen. Ayub has chosen his wife Zaibun Nisa to be his Mayoress, they have been married for 45 years. Originally born in Pakistan, Zaibun has lived in the UK for many years. They have 6 beautiful children and 14 grandchildren.<br /><br />Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-66864534825930883332023-04-13T11:14:49.532-07:002023-04-13T11:14:49.532-07:00As of 2016, there were 12,454 Pakistani doctors an...As of 2016, there were 12,454 Pakistani doctors and 45,830 Indian doctors out of 215,630 total in the United States.<br /><br /><br />https://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?QueryId=68336<br /><br />India 45,830<br /><br />Pakistan 12,454<br /><br />Grenada 10,789<br /><br />Philipines 10,217<br /><br />Dominica 9,974<br /><br />Mexico 9,923<br /><br />Canada 7,765<br /><br />Dominican Republic 6,269<br /><br />China 5,772<br /><br />UAE 4,635<br /><br />Egypt 4,379<br /><br />------------<br /><br />Total Foreign Doctors in UK 66,211<br /><br />India 18,953<br /><br />Pakistan 8,026<br /><br />Nigeria 4,880<br /><br />Egypt 4,471<br /><br />Foreign Doctors in Canada 25,400:<br /><br />South Africa 2,604<br /><br />India 2,127<br /><br />Ireland 1,942<br /><br />UK 1,923<br /><br /><br />US 1,263<br /><br /><br />Pakistan 1,087Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-3629115373208636192023-04-11T14:27:47.594-07:002023-04-11T14:27:47.594-07:00Watch: Braverman dubbed a ‘Trump tribute act’ foll...Watch: Braverman dubbed a ‘Trump tribute act’ following grooming comments<br />'I am calling her rhetoric racist, I am', Tory peer Baroness Sayeeda Warsi said.<br /><br /><br />https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/politics/watch-braverman-dubbed-a-trump-tribute-act-following-grooming-comments-346597/<br /><br />Suella Braverman has been labelled a “Trump tribute act” following her divisive rhetoric on child sexual exploitation.<br /><br />The home secretary pointed to a “predominance of certain ethnic groups – and I say British Pakistani males – who hold cultural values totally at odds with British values, who see women in a demeaned and illegitimate way and pursue an outdated and frankly heinous approach in terms of the way they behave” in a speech.<br /><br />She also claimed that victims and whistle-blowers were ignored “due to cultural sensitivity and political correctness’’, a claim challenged in many reports including the Operation Linden Report, published in June 2022.<br /><br />Writing in response to the comments, a number of health organisations have criticised the home secretary’s rhetoric in the strongest possible terms.<br /><br />An open letter reads:<br /><br />“It is unacceptable for the Home Secretary to use inflammatory and divisive rhetoric that is sensationalist and contradicts her own department’s evidence.<br /><br /><br />-----<br /><br /><br />LBC<br />@LBC<br />'I am calling her rhetoric racist, I am.'<br /><br />Tory peer Baroness<br />@SayeedaWarsi<br />condemns Suella Braverman's language and tells<br />@mrjamesob<br />we need a grown-up as Home Secretary, not a 'Trump tribute act'.<br />Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-46929189337083064712023-04-05T14:06:17.479-07:002023-04-05T14:06:17.479-07:00this whole "gang" thing sounds like &quo...this whole "gang" thing sounds like "Love Jihad" non-sense from India. The irony is that in India, most widespread abuse is committed by caste supremacists against lower caste women or by militarymen (due to an assumed impunity)Zen, Germanyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18090421954172901154noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-83570969663724650742023-04-05T07:31:25.568-07:002023-04-05T07:31:25.568-07:00Braverman words on British Pakistani men discrimin...Braverman words on British Pakistani men discriminatory: Pakistan<br />Pakistani official says UK home secretary’s remarks signal ‘intent to target and treat British Pakistanis differently’.<br /><br />https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/4/5/braverman-words-on-british-pakistani-men-discriminatory-pakistan<br /><br />Pakistan’s foreign office has criticised British Home Secretary Suella Braverman for “discriminatory and xenophobic” comments after she said that British Pakistani men “hold cultural values at odds with British values”.<br /><br />In an interview with Sky News on Monday, Braverman also alleged British Pakistani men worked in child abuse rings or networks that targeted “vulnerable white English girls”.<br /><br /><br />Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson Mehnaz Baloch on Wednesday condemned Braverman’s remarks which, he said, painted a “highly misleading picture signalling the intent to target and treat British Pakistanis differently”.<br /><br />Baloch said Braverman had “erroneously branded criminal behaviour of some individuals as a representation of the entire community”.<br /><br />“She fails to take note of the systemic racism and ghettoisation of communities and omits to recognise the tremendous cultural, economic and political contributions that British Pakistanis continue to make in British society,” Baloch said in her weekly briefing in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad.<br /><br />A British Home Office report on group-based child sexual abuse published in 2020 pointed out that research on offender ethnicity is limited, and tends to rely on poor-quality data.<br /><br />However, it did highlight studies that show white men as being the majority of offenders, in comparison with Asian or Black men.<br /><br />The report’s findings were pointed out to Braverman during the interview, but she went on to say that British Pakistani men “see women in a demeaned and illegitimate way and who pursue an outdated and frankly heinous approach in terms of the way they behave”.<br /><br />Braverman’s comments have received a backlash on social media, with users saying the remarks will mislead the public and “incite violence against those with particular racial characteristics”.<br /><br /><br /><br />Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-21933544766750356642023-04-04T07:45:18.165-07:002023-04-04T07:45:18.165-07:00What’s Not on Sunak’s To-Do List? Ending Racism
An...What’s Not on Sunak’s To-Do List? Ending Racism<br />Analysis by Pankaj Mishra | Bloomberg<br /><br />https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/whats-not-on-sunaks-to-do-list-ending-racism/2022/10/26/a467421c-54fc-11ed-ac8b-08bbfab1c5a5_story.html<br /><br />In any case, a few over-promoted non-White people are by no means guaranteed to diminish mainstream prejudice against the great majority of their compatriots. Marrying Prince Harry, Meghan Markle was widely supposed to nudge Britain as well as the Royal Family into accepting a multi-racial future. As it happened, the arrival of a dark-skinned princess in Buckingham Palace provoked Britain’s race-baiting press into a frenzy, forcing her to leave the country altogether.<br /><br />Britain’s xenophobic political and media culture is more willing to accommodate those who indulge its basest instincts, such as the two successive Tory Home secretaries of Indian origin, Priti Patel and Suella Braverman. They stridently advertised their loathing of immigration and risked breaking international law with their scheme to deport asylum-seekers to Rwanda. “I would love to have a front page of the Telegraph with a plane taking off to Rwanda,” Braverman claimed at the Tory party conference early this month, shortly before she was sacked by Truss for breaching a ministerial code. “That’s my dream, it’s my obsession.” The daughter of immigrants from the Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Goa, Braverman nearly derailed the UK’s trade deal with India by complaining that it would increase immigration from her parents’ homeland.<br /><br />Undoubtedly, the Tory party, long stigmatized as “nasty,” needs a fresh identity and purpose. And Sunak, the son of Hindu immigrants from Africa, could awaken his peers to an irrevocably interdependent world.<br /><br />But Sunak is unlikely to vacate their hard-right positions: He campaigned for Brexit, fully supports the Rwanda policy and has just reappointed Braverman as Home secretary. There are good reasons to suspect that he would retard rather than accelerate Britain’s much-needed transition to a sober state of mind.<br /><br />He revealed during his summer campaign for prime minister that he is not above stoking culture wars against those Braverman last week denounced as “tofu-eating wokerati.” Indeed, facing a long economic recession with diminishing resources and no popular mandate, Sunak may have little choice. Uncontrollable economic crises are pushing traditional right-wing politicians everywhere into demagogic rhetoric about immigrants, wokeness, cancel culture and more.<br /><br />Celebrations over a Hindu’s ascent to the UK’s highest political office are thus misplaced. Sunak, too, could end up merely proving, like his recent Tory colleagues of Indian ancestry, that some colored folks are prepared to work twice as hard as White people to demonstrate their hard-right credentials.Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-80479432922009386432023-04-04T07:44:37.564-07:002023-04-04T07:44:37.564-07:00What’s Not on Sunak’s To-Do List? Ending Racism
An...What’s Not on Sunak’s To-Do List? Ending Racism<br />Analysis by Pankaj Mishra | Bloomberg<br /><br />https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/whats-not-on-sunaks-to-do-list-ending-racism/2022/10/26/a467421c-54fc-11ed-ac8b-08bbfab1c5a5_story.html<br /><br />Two weeks ago, the United Kingdom was thrown into economic chaos by Kwasi Kwarteng, its first Black chancellor of the Exchequer. A floundering Tory party has now tasked Rishi Sunak, the UK’s first Brown prime minister, to clean up the mess. But racial progress, let alone political and economic stability, is not in sight yet.<br /><br />Sunak’s biography (he moved straight from Oxford to Goldman Sachs and then Stanford University and hedge funds) belongs quintessentially to the rarefied world of metropolitan globalization. What is remarkable about Sunak and Kwarteng, the Eton-educated son of Ghanaian immigrants, is that they entered a gilded global class with a swiftness and assurance that would have been inconceivable to those who first arrived in Britain from its former colonies in the 1950s and 1960s.<br /><br />Writing to his wife in 1953, V.S. Naipaul, a Hindu from Trinidad who became arguably Britain’s greatest postwar writer, described how he, though Oxford-educated, was considered only “for jobs as porters in kitchens, and with the road gangs.” Humiliation and despair remained commonplace experiences for people who emigrated to Britain decades after Naipaul and who worked, proverbially, twice as hard to get half as far as White Britons. Sunak, whose middle-class parents paid for him to go to snotty Winchester College, admitted in an interview in 2020 that racist abuse “stings in a way that very few other things have.”<br /><br />But individual escapes from collective dishonor — through hedge-funding or marriage into a billionaire’s family — don’t amount to general social progress. Hopes that Sunak’s move to 10 Downing Street has brought closer a post-racial future may prove as cruelly premature as the fantasies ignited by Barack Obama’s elevation to the White House in 2008.<br /><br />For one, Sunak’s task seems impossible. He is expected to salvage a society, politics and economy profoundly damaged by his own party’s openly racist and mendacious campaign for Brexit. In the contest for prime-ministership last month, Tory party members rejected Sunak, despite the fact that his opponent, Liz Truss, was a self-proclaimed “thrill-seeker,” who loved to “embrace the chaos.”<br /><br />The overwhelmingly White and elderly Tories chose an obviously loose cannon to be prime minister at least partly because Sunak has, as he himself confessed good-humoredly during his campaign, a “great tan.” Last week, a large proportion of them wanted Boris Johnson to return. As their mortgages rise and their pensions shrink, they might decide that the first Hindu and richest prime minister ever is as much of an undesirable imposition as the first Black chancellor, chosen by Truss to unleash chaos in the UK.<br /><br />Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-87782215723967112072023-04-02T16:45:31.027-07:002023-04-02T16:45:31.027-07:00Mohammad Ramzan falsely accused in grooming case
...Mohammad Ramzan falsely accused in grooming case<br /><br />https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-cumbria-64950862<br /><br />A woman who falsely claimed she was raped by multiple men and trafficked by an Asian grooming gang has been jailed for eight-and-a-half years.<br /><br />Eleanor Williams sparked protests in her Cumbrian home town of Barrow after posting photos on social media of injuries she said were from beatings.<br /><br />But Preston Crown Court heard she inflicted the wounds herself using a hammer.<br /><br />Williams, 22, was found guilty of perverting the course of justice.<br /><br />A two-day sentencing hearing was told three men Williams falsely accused over a three-year period tried to take their own lives after being targeted and suffering "hell on earth".<br />Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-13382846051111632322023-04-02T16:45:00.161-07:002023-04-02T16:45:00.161-07:00Home Secretary accused of 'parroting far-right...Home Secretary accused of 'parroting far-right myths' about British Pakistani men | The National<br /><br />https://www.thenational.scot/news/23429688.home-secretary-accused-parroting-far-right-myths-british-pakistani-men/<br /><br />Braverman’s language was condemned by Robina Qureshi, CEO of the refugee charity Positive Action in Housing (PAiH).<br /><br />She called on the Home Secretary to apologise for her “gross misrepresentation”, describing her language around British Pakistani men as “unacceptable”.<br /><br />The Tory MP blamed “political correctness” for authorities failing to tackle grooming gangs during a media round on Sunday morning.<br /><br />The UK Government is expected to set out details on Monday of a plan to tackle grooming gangs and better protect children, which will include a consultation on introducing a mandatory duty on professionals working with children to report concerns about sexual abuse.<br /><br />However, on Sunday, Braverman singled out British Pakistani men over concerns about grooming gangs as she accused authorities of turning a “blind eye” to signs of abuse over fears of being labelled “racist” or “bigoted”.<br /><br />The Home Secretary said that the “systematic and institutional failure to safeguard the welfare of children when it comes to sexual abuse” was one of the biggest scandals in British history.<br /><br />“What’s clear is that what we’ve seen is a practice whereby vulnerable white English girls, sometimes in care, sometimes who are in challenging circumstances, being pursued and raped and drugged and harmed by gangs of British Pakistani men who’ve worked in child abuse rings or networks,” she told the Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme on Sky News.<br /><br /><br /><br />“It’s now down to the authorities to track these perpetrators down without fear or favour relentlessly and bring them to justice.<br /><br /><br /><br />“We’ve seen institutions and state agencies, whether it’s social workers, teachers, the police, turn a blind eye to these signs of abuse out of political correctness, out of fear of being called racists, out of fear of being called bigoted.”<br /><br />Charity boss Qureshi blasted the remarks, said they were “unacceptable” and demanded an apology for the “gross misrepresentation” of the Pakistani community.<br /><br />She said: "The Home Secretary, Suella Braverman, has reached a new low.<br /><br /><br /><br />“Her remarks are in direct contradiction to her own Department’s research, which found that most groups of child sex offenders tend to be white men under the age of 30.<br /><br />“She is openly parroting far-right myths about racial groups and amplifying them into national trends.<br /><br />“Her commentary is unacceptable, and I call on her to apologise for her gross misrepresentations of our communities.”<br /><br />Qureshi said Braverman’s comments were “grossly offensive” to the thousands of law-abiding British Pakistanis living in the UK, and noted that newly elected First Minister of Scotland Humza Yousaf is of Pakistani descent.<br /><br />“Yet she displays all the tact of a bull in a china shop,” Qureshi added.<br /><br /><br /><br />“Her comments are tantamount to inciting racist violence which is a criminal offence. “Parliament must reign in this government minister who openly tells mistruths in the face of her own Department’s research.<br /><br /><br /><br />“Sadly, this Home Secretary appears to be on a mission to cause as much offence as possible to those of immigrant stock, and to appease her far right voter base.<br /><br />“Yet the irony for her is that the far right don’t want brown or black immigrants, or their children, or her, in this country or in positions of power.”<br /><br /><br /><br />It comes after the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse last year described sexual abuse of children as an “epidemic that leaves tens of thousands of victims in its poisonous wake”.<br /><br />The seven-year inquiry into institutional failings in England and Wales concluded that people in positions of trust should be compelled by law to report child sexual abuse.<br /><br />The report found that there was currently “a marked absence of a cohesive set of laws and procedures in England and in Wales that require individuals working with children to report child sexual abuse”.<br /><br />Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-21018670800702346272023-04-02T16:44:11.910-07:002023-04-02T16:44:11.910-07:00This week marks a watershed moment in a decade of ...This week marks a watershed moment in a decade of discussion of “grooming gangs”: a much-anticipated Home Office report has concluded that there is no credible evidence that any one ethnic group is over-represented in cases of child sexual exploitation.<br /><br />https://amp.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/dec/19/home-office-report-grooming-gangs-not-muslim<br /><br />For many in Britain today the term “grooming gang” immediately suggests Pakistani-heritage Muslim men abusing white girls, but the Home Office researchers now tell us that “research has found that group-based offenders are most commonly White”.<br /><br /><br />A powerful modern racial myth has been exploded. What started as a far-right trope had migrated into the mainstream, meeting little resistance along the way. In 2011, the Times and its chief investigative reporter, Andrew Norfolk, claimed to have uncovered a new ethnic crime threat, shrouded until then in a supposed “conspiracy of silence”.<br /><br />The racial stereotype gained credence when the Quilliam Foundation, a controversial “counter-extremism” group, claimed that 84% of “grooming gang offenders” were Asian.<br /><br />The “grooming gangs” narrative fed into the agenda of the far right, but it was not only there that the issue was racialised: the Labour MP Sarah Champion, for one, wrote a now notorious article in the Sun in 2017, for which she resigned as shadow equalities minister.<br /><br />The two-year study by the Home Office makes very clear that there are no grounds for asserting that Muslim or Pakistani-heritage men are disproportionately engaged in such crimes, and, citing our research, it confirmed the unreliability of the Quilliam claim.<br /><br /><br /><br />The horrific and widely reported crimes committed in places such as Rochdale, Oxford and Telford were real: but racist stereotyping and demonisation deflected from that.<br /><br /><br />The claims that “grooming gangs” were not properly investigated due to “political correctness” and a fear of being accused of racism are heavily undermined by decades of research highlighting the consistent over-policing of minority communities. What’s more, the whole history of the UK’s responses to child sexual exploitation and abuse is littered with failings – as shown by the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse, Operation Yewtree and numerous other investigations and inquiries. There were also regrettable consequences for child protection, since victims and offenders who don’t fit the stereotype can be overlooked.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />This misdirected focus can be found in the Home Office report itself. Its title and executive summary both imply it covers “group-based child sexual exploitation” in the whole. But it fails to include a whole range of problems that might reasonably fit into that category, such as abuse that occurs online, and in schools, care homes and other institutions. Instead, it follows the crowd by dwelling on child sexual exploitation “in the community”. This construct is vaguely defined and poorly justified, although certainly more acceptable sounding than “grooming gangs” – the broadly equivalent term that has no legal meaning but plenty of racial and political baggage.<br /><br /><br /><br />It might be tempting to think that, if nothing else, a decade of outrage had stimulated wider concern about child sexual exploitation. In truth, it has diverted resources and effort into wasteful paths while opportunities to address systemic barriers to prevention and improve victim support have been missed.<br /><br /><br /><br />The claims that “grooming gangs” were not properly investigated due to “political correctness” and a fear of being accused of racism are heavily undermined by decades of research highlighting the consistent over-policing of minority communities. What’s more, the whole history of the UK’s responses to child sexual exploitation and abuse is littered with failings – as shown by the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse, Operation Yewtree and numerous other investigations and inquiries. There were also regrettable consequences for child protection, since victims and offenders who don’t fit the stereotype can be overlooked.<br />Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-25338985713320279912023-03-29T13:47:03.831-07:002023-03-29T13:47:03.831-07:00Majumdar: "Do you think Hamza sahib's anc...Majumdar: "Do you think Hamza sahib's ancestral homeland can give the same message?"<br /><br /><br />Yes. And the other message is that top leadership should rise from all strata of society based on merit.Riaz Haqhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00522781692886598586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5848640164815342479.post-90895308839091008892023-03-29T13:46:08.874-07:002023-03-29T13:46:08.874-07:00we have sent a clear message, that your color of s...we have sent a clear message, that your color of skin, your faith, is not a barrier to leading the country we all call home"<br /><br />Do you think Hamza sahib's ancestral homeland can give the same message?<br />Majumdarnoreply@blogger.com