Key facts
- A UK government minister claims a child abuse scandal at Medomsley detention centre was ignored due to the victims' working-class background.
- The abuse, involving paedophile Neville Husband, occurred at Medomsley detention centre between 1961 and 1987.
- An investigation identified over 2,000 victims.
- A government review has made 34 recommendations for improved safeguarding in youth custody.
- New measures include enhanced staff training and vetting.
UK sentencing and youth justice minister Jake Richards has stated that one of the country's most significant child abuse scandals, occurring at Medomsley detention centre between 1961 and 1987, was overlooked for decades because the victims were working-class boys from the north of England. Richards is implementing recommendations from a new safeguarding review to prevent such abuse from recurring.
The abuse at Medomsley, County Durham, involved paedophile Neville Husband, who raped and tortured boys over three decades. The scale of the offending was revealed through Guardian reports and led to a six-year investigation by Durham Constabulary, which identified more than 2,000 victims. An inquiry by the prisons and probation ombudsman, Adrian Usher, published its findings last year, prompting a government apology.
Richards described the abuse as 'industrial sexual abuse and rape of some of the most vulnerable boys in our society.' He believes that a prevailing culture and societal apathy, stemming from the perception of these boys as 'bad' working-class individuals, contributed to the collective neglect by those in power, including politicians and parts of the media. He cited an example of a victim sent to Medomsley for stealing a jacket on a cold night, illustrating the prevailing attitude that these boys were intrinsically bad and thus less deserving of proper treatment.
The new safeguarding review, led by Isabelle Trowler, the government's chief social worker for children and families in England, proposes 34 recommendations. These include enhanced staff training, more rigorous vetting processes, and ensuring dedicated social workers with child protection expertise are available at every youth custody site. Trowler emphasized the profound responsibility of ensuring meaningful and lasting change based on the experiences of children currently in custody and those who suffered in the past. Usher welcomed the government's commitment to implementing all recommendations and raised questions about the current governance and oversight of prison staff conduct, suggesting a need for greater independence.