Six-year-old girl suffered sexual abuse from classmates 'on a daily basis'
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A six-year-old schoolgirl was stripped and sexually abused by
almost two dozen classmates on a daily basis, it was revealed
today.
The child was subjected to the horrific ordeal within the grounds
of her primary school by 23 classmates her own age for
months.
An official inquiry into the abuse the child regularly suffered
accepted that sexually harmful behaviour did take place.
But it concluded that no action could be taken against those
responsible because they were too young.
The youth of the children made it impossible to gather proof of
what had happened and all were under the age of criminality.
The conclusions of the serious case review were published two years
after the allegations were first made.
A review of that inquiry process itself is now under way.
The unnamed schoolgirl is from Wales but neither the school she
attended nor the local authority can be identified.
The child has since been moved to a new school but her mother
claims she will be scarred for life by the abuse she
suffered.
Keith Towler, Children's Commissioner for Wales, called the review
"a shocking failure".
"The bottom line is the family will never know what happened to
their child," he said.
He also acknowledged that the serious case review system was
"failing some of the most vulnerable children".
The mother of the child said it is wrong that nobody will be held
accountable for what happened.
The serious case review was only launched by the local authority
when she took legal action.
The girl's mother spoke today of her shock and horror at learning
from her daughter about the abuse she suffered.
In an interview with BBC Wales, she said: "She was telling me
things that I think every mother dreads to hear from their
daughter. It was horrendous what she'd gone through.
"Every day she was being stripped. Every day she was being sexually
and physically abused and every day she cried out for help and
nobody ever came."
She added: "I think that you cannot excuse that. How can you
possibly say that that is okay and nobody is answerable for
that?"
Mr Towler said a review of the serious case review system was now
under way.
"Clearly there are issues with the serious case review system and
there is consensus that the current serious case review
arrangements are not working effectively," he said today.
"The Welsh government has heard those calls for change and is
responding. I will not yet be undertaking a review but instead will
be working with practitioners and other relevant officials on two
groups which the deputy minister for social services has
convened.
"The establishment of the Welsh Safeguarding Forum, of which I'm a
member, aims to ensure that safeguarding is achieved at a national,
regional and local level.
"This Forum's work is critical in ensuring the system is
strengthened and that joint working is improved to safeguard our
children.
"Other work is under way with a working group to draft a new
framework for undertaking reviews and one of my senior managers is
a member of that group.
"This Forum and the Advisory Group must address the ineffective
system which will result in change in practice. We cannot find
ourselves in the same position again where the system is failing
some of our most vulnerable children."
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