Sunday, 6 July 2014

NEWS: GOVERNMENT COVERS UP FOR CHILD ABUSE

Lord Tebbit: there 'may well' have been a Government cover-up of child abuse
The veteran former minister says it was the instinct of people at the time to protect 'the system' and not to delve too deeply into uncomfortable allegations


Lord Tebbit says he thinks there may well have been an establishment cover-up of child abuse in the 1980s Photo: Andrew Crowley/The Telegraph

A veteran former Conservative minister who served in the cabinet with Lord Brittan has said there “may well” have been an establishment cover-up of child abuse in the 1980s.


Lord Tebbit, who served in a series of ministerial posts under Margaret Thatcher at the same time as Lord Brittan, the former Home Secretary, said the instinct of people at the time was to protect "the system" and not to delve too deeply into uncomfortable allegations.

His comments come as Francis Maude, the Cabinet minister, said a probe was necessary to finally “lift up the drains” on who knew what about historic allegations of child abuse.

The Home Office announced a fresh review into what happened to a file alleging paedophile activity at Westminster which was handed to the then home secretary Leon (now Lord) Brittan by the Tory MP Geoffrey Dickens.

Appearing on BBC1's The Andrew Marr Show, Lord Tebbit said: "At that time I think most people would have thought that the establishment, the system, was to be protected and if a few things had gone wrong here and there that it was more important to protect the system than to delve too far into it.

"That view, I think, was wrong then and it is spectacularly shown to be wrong because the abuses have grown."

Asked if he thought there had been a "big political cover-up" at the time, he said: "I think there may well have been. But it was almost unconscious. It was the thing that people did at that time."

Speaking on Pienaar’s politics on BBC Radio 5 live Maude added that “nobody can be above the law” and “justice has to be done” over the allegations of child abuse.

Nigel Evans, the Conservative MP, said that someone "within the Home Office" must know what happened to the file.

He told Pienaar's politics: "There will be more than one person who would know that that file existed and has read that file and took the decision either to destroy it or if it's not been destroyed, it is somewhere, and I think that they really do need now to turn the Home Office upside down."

He added: "If nobody comes forward then they really do need to look absolutely everywhere to ensure that as Francis Maude said, nobody is above the law, we need to make sure that the people inside that file are properly investigated, and the question is, why weren't they investigated in the first place?"

Lord Brittan, now a Conservative peer, was challenged over what he knew about the dossier detailing an alleged Westminster paedophile ring that was passed to him when he was home secretary and later disappeared.

Lord Brittan confirmed that he was handed a “substantial bundle of papers” when he was Home

Secretary, an office he held from 1983 until 1983.

The papers were compiled by Geoffrey Dickens, then a Conservative MP, who had investigated child abuse networks.

Simon Danczuk, the Labour MP for Rochdale, has said that the Dickens papers contained details of paedophiles operating a network around Westminster.

Lord Brittan said that he passed the papers to Home Office officials and asked them to “look carefully” at the material they contained to see if any action was needed.

That investigation found that Lord Brittan had acted appropriately, the Home Office said. It also "found no evidence of Mr Dickens expressing dissatisfaction about the action taken in respect of the information he had passed on".

The Home Office investigation “shows that appropriate action and follow up happened" in relation to the papers, Lord Brittan said.

An internal review of hundreds of files last year found 13 previously undisclosed “items of information about alleged child abuse – including four implicating Home Office officials".

Mark Sedwill, who has been appointed by David Cameron to investigate claims of a Whitehall cover-up of political paedophiles, revealed that 114 potentially relevant files” were “presumed destroyed, missing or not found".

An independent legal figure, expected to be a promised QC, is to be appointed to conduct a review of the Home Office’s handling of the case.

The news comes as it emerged that Lord Brittan had been interviewed by police over a historical rape allegation.

The Independent on Sunday reported that Mr Britton was accused of raping a 19-year-old female student in 1967. He was not an MP at the time of the alleged incident at his London flat.

According to his lawyers Lord Brittan will not be making a comment today, but it is understood he strongly denies the allegation.

In a statement, a Metropolitan Police spokesman said a man in his 70s had been interviewed under caution.

CYCLIST'S SHOCKING BEHAVIOUR TO SPECTATOR




The absence of home favourite Mark Cavendish did little to quell the tumultuous crowds in Yorkshire during stage two of the Tour de France. In fact, despite several warnings and pleas from both riders and race officials a very small minority of fans did create havoc on the narrow roads of the Peak District and Pennines.

Yellow jersey Marcel Kittel was felled early in the stage – and it was not his Giant Shimano team’s only spectator scare throughout the hilly stage in the north of England. Let’s take a closer look at these incidents and some other truths from yet another gripping day in – and out – of the saddle.

Not so smart phone

Quite why spectators think they their viewing experience will be made all the better by filming the action with their phones is beyond the realms of logic – particularly when the host broadcast feed of the Tour de France is so consistently brilliant.

Ramunas Navardauskas clearly shares the same opinion, the Garmin-Sharp rider losing his trademark Lithuanian cool in quite spectacular fashion as the peloton grappled through the crowds on the ascent of Holme Moss.

Third on Saturday’s opening stage, Navardauskas twice knocked phones out of the prying hands of spectators in what was the biggest rider backlash since Belgium’s Wout Poels snatched a spectator’s pair of sunglasses and threw them down a ravine during the Giro in May.

After the stage numerous riders complained about the rise of smartphones on the side of the road. “People are taking selfies with their back towards the peloton - it’s very dangerous,” Jurgen van den Broeck told Belgian TV. On Twitter, BMC’s Tejay van Garderen left a rather cryptic message thought to have been in reference to this current fad – although, to be fair, he may have been alluding to David Millar’s hat…

"A dangerous mix of vanity and stupidity........."
— Tejay van Garderen (@tejay_van) July 6, 2014

Spectator throws Roy a curveball

On any normal day the biggest worry for this man would be being spotted in public wearing a pink polo shirt. That was until he decided to watch the approaching peloton through the viewfinder of his camera, with his left arm and leg dangerously encroaching upon the road just as Giant Shimano’s Roy Curvers was preparing his man Marcel Kittel for the intermediate sprint.

Somehow both Curvers and a team-mate – perhaps Koen de Kort – avoided hitting the deck, but the spectator was clearly sent spinning to the floor in quite a violent fashion. Let’s hope that he escaped unscathed – and that next time he comes to watch a bike race he takes a couple of steps back and goes easy on doing his best French gendarme impression…

Take hat

Some people said he looked like Paddington Bear; others more like a Canadian Mountie. One thing’s certain, David Millar made his presence known while he still chews over his absence from the peloton.

Working as a TV consultant for the opening three stages of the race following his snub from Garmin-Sharp, Millar looked like he’d left his fixie in Shoreditch en route to Sheffield on Sunday. He’d hoped that the fans would be tossing him a few ‘chapeaux’ for his performances on the bike – but in the end he’s had to resort to bowling the public over with his sartorial panache.

No such thing as a free lunch

That may be – but there is such a thing as a free lunch musette when big Marcus Burghardt’s rolling through town. BMC’s German powerhouse classily put a smile on one boy’s face following the feeding zone at Hebden Bridge – and followed it up with an attack on the descent of Holme Moss.

Of course, what you don’t see in the above photo was the fallout when the same boy tried to take a photo of Ramunas Navardauskas just moments later…

It’ll take a return to French soil for this joke to run dry

For as long as the Tour stays in the UK it seems like the public mourning of Bradley Wiggins’ absence will continue unabated. And with the race heading near Wiggo’s old stomping ground of Kilburn on Sunday, we can expect the jokes to continue for at least another day.

JESSICA SIMPSON TIES THE KNOT





Singer and actress Jessica Simpson has tied the knot.

She married retired NFL player Eric Johnson on Saturday at San Ysidro Ranch in Montecito, California, said her publicist Lauren Auslander.

Jessica and Eric began dating in 2010 and have a two-year-old daughter, Maxwell, and a one-year-old son named Ace.

Ms Auslander said Ace served as a ring bearer and Maxwell walked down the aisle as a flower girl.

It is the second marriage for both Jessica, 33, and 34-year-old Eric.

Jessica was previously married to singer Nick Lachey. The two co-starred on a VH1 reality series Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica for three seasons. Shortly after their third wedding anniversary, they split up.