Rotherham survivors say they were also abused by police officers

According to lawyers, there is no “no belief olan investigating the allegations of the survivors of sexual exploitation in Rotherham’s police force in the abuse of their officers in the police force.
Police observer said that the victims of the Rotherham abuse scandal were abused by serving the civil servants and said that there was no conflict of interest that investigates their personnel of the Southern Yorkshire Police (SYP).
Five women told BBC how they were exploited from the gangs in the town as a child and sexual abuse by the officers.
According to a special report of the BBC, a girl was raped in a distinctive police car from the age of 12, and the officer threatened to give it back to the groom if he did not.
SYP asks questions about these allegations under the management of the Independent Police Behavior Office (IPC).
So far, three former officers working for power have been arrested.
Switalkis, representing the victims of abuse in Rotherham, said that he hoped that the abuse of civil servants will be revealed after the Linden Operation, an ongoing investigation on how the abuse of civil servants reacts to the sexual abuse of children in Rotherham.
The company said in a statement: “This has never come. For years, SYP, although we have presented the accounts of the survivors, the police officers allegedly resisted our requests for investigation.
“He does not believe that those who abuse in Rotherham will do a comprehensive job for the SYP’s allegation of abuse by their officers.
“In addition, cope with SYP is retraumating for them. Most of our customers refuse to inform the SYP because they will believe and have been very ill -treatment in the past.
“This investigation must be delivered to an independent police force to make survivors feel confident enough to come forward.
“The accounts we hear are full, only a part of the entire abuse scale are completely sad.”
According to the BBC report, Prof Alexis Jay, who directed an independent report on sexual abuse in Rotherham, was “shock ına because he felt that SYP was exploring former officers and that another organization should be the leader.
An IOPC spokesman said: “When we first received a referral from the SYP in October 2024, we realized the complaints of the allegations of child sexual abuse including former SYP officials, and we instructed to conduct an investigation under our power and control.

“This means that IPC is responsible for the investigation and all basic decisions.
“Three former SYP officers have been arrested since the investigation began.”
“We are in contact with lawyers representing some sacrificial-survivors about the more accusation report to investigate any new complaint. The investigation has expanded to contain complaints from six women since then.
“We want the victim-Survivors to make sure that all complaints will be handled very seriously and precisely. We encourage any sacrifice-sons or any witnesses to come to the fore if they have not done before.”
Söz We made sure that none of the investigations did not work with any of the former officers under investigation or that they were not investigated as part of Op Line.
“We are pleased that there is no conflict of interest, but of course we regularly review these issues during directed investigations.”
SYP Vice President Constable Hayley Barnett said that a private civil servant team was working on constant investigations.
He said: uz We know how difficult it should be for today’s Southern Yorkshire police for a sacrifice or surviving person who was so disappointed in the past.
“We honor this trust with maximum respect and care.
“Victims and survivors are at the center of this investigation and continue to be, and all our actions continue to be done with their own interests.”
Barnett said that power was working with the Stovewood operation, a major investigation of child sexual exploitation in Rotherham between 1997-2013.
He said that this was “helping us not to leave any stones”.
In 2022, the Linden operation concluded that SYP fundamentally failed to protect the vulnerable children and young people in the period under the investigation.
The operation Stovewood identified more than 1,100 children who participated in the exploitation in Rotherham.