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In New Zealand's Parliament, a battered cookie tin decides which new laws get debated

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Baseball   来源:Crypto  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:At the centre of the conflict were disagreements about religion, and discontent over the king's use of power and his economic policies.

At the centre of the conflict were disagreements about religion, and discontent over the king's use of power and his economic policies.

She added that she did not yet know "what Baroness Casey will say about which particular area" but would act on the facts.Conservative Chris Philp said the inquiries, which would not be able to compel people to give evidence, "just won't do" and repeated his call for a national inquiry.

In New Zealand's Parliament, a battered cookie tin decides which new laws get debated

The shadow home secretary also asked the minister how she would force councils to hold an inquiry, in cases where the local authorities were unwilling to do so, citing Bradford council as an example.Earlier this year, Bradford Council's Safeguarding Children Partnership said a new inquiry was "unlikely to provide us with any new learnings" having heldRobbie Moore, a Conservative MP for Keighley and Ilkley, accused Bradford Councils of avoiding commissioning a new inquiry for "fear of unearthing a very significant problem".

In New Zealand's Parliament, a battered cookie tin decides which new laws get debated

In reply, Phillips told the MP that, if Baroness Casey identified problems with particular local authorities, "he has my guarantee, I will pursue them".For more than a decade there has been a series of high-profile cases where groups of men, predominantly of Pakistani descent, were convicted of sexually abusing and raping mainly white girls in the UK.

In New Zealand's Parliament, a battered cookie tin decides which new laws get debated

In 2022, Prof Alexis Jay published the conclusions of a seven-year national inquiry into child sexual abuse, which investigated abuse in churches and schools, as well as by grooming gangs.

Interest around the subject was re-ignited at the start of the year when tech billionaire Elon Musk began calling for a second national inquiry into the scandal - a proposal that was backed by opposition MPs, as well as some Labour ones.But BBC Verify has carried out extensive searches of Home Office circulars issued across that period and found no evidence that any document containing this advice exists.

Brown - who was prime minister in 2008 - has called the allegations "a complete fabrication" and the Home Office says there "has never been any truth" to them.Social media posts referencing a memo and using either the phrase "informed choice" or a variation like "lifestyle choice" have circulated for several years with some gaining traction.

But that intensified dramatically since the start of the year, with posts repeating the claim generating tens of millions of views in the past week after Mr Musk amplified several of them on his social media platform, X.In one post, which has received over 25 million views, Mr Musk alleged that "Gordon Brown sold those little girls for votes" while reposting another user, June Slater, using words that were apparently a variation of the memo claim.

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