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Suella Braverman has rejected suggestions she was racist for picking out an Anglo-Pakistani man during the government crackdown on grooming gangs.
The Secretary of the Interior claimed that the Rotherham, Telford and Rochdale grooming gang members were “overwhelmingly majority” British Pakistani and therefore “told the straight truth”.
Ms Braverman accused the former chief prosecutor of the Rochdale case of indulging in “dangerous” rhetoric on the issue, notably in a 2020 Home Office-commissioned investigation that found clear distinctions between gang members and ethnicity. After facing criticism that no relevance was found.
The report found that most child sex offenders were men under the age of 30, and the vast majority of them were white, but asked whether grooming gang members were more likely to be black or Asian. He added that there was not enough evidence to show.
Rishi Sunak has personally apologized for the “hurt” caused by Braverman’s comments, according to Shabazz Arif, chief whip of the Labor-run Berry Council’s Conservative group.
but write audienceMr. Braverman claimed he was right.
“I know my motives will be questioned. It’s the fate of politicians,” she said. “But there’s a line that shouldn’t be crossed. If everything is racist, nothing.
“To casually accuse me of being racist for speaking the blunt truth distorts the meaning of the term and does a great disservice to all of us working to combat racism. brings.”
Braverman went on to claim that she was part of a group that “was hit over the head with fashionable fiction” and “promotes unfashionable facts.”
The Home Secretary added:
“Like the fact that 100% of women don’t have a penis.”