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Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Her rapist was offered the chance to see her child, victim claims

Sammy Woodhouse, who has waived her legal right to anonymity in a bid to help other victims, released a video on Tuesday calling for the British government to change the law after a local council in the English city of Rotherham offered her rapist the option to apply "parental rights" over her son, she alleges. Woodhouse was attacked when she was a teen.
"This story is actually about myself, about my son, and about the man that raped me," she said in the video posted on Twitter.
"And the fact that Rotherham Council have offered him to apply for parental rights over my child even though (it was) proven in a court of law -- that (he) was sentenced to 35 years -- that he was a danger to myself and to other children."
Alongside British Member of Parliament Louise Haigh, Woodhouse is advocating for a change of law in the 1989 of Children's Act to ensure that "rapists can't gain access to children conceived through rape and abuse," she said.
The issue arose when the council sought alternative care for her son -- a move taken with the support of Woodhouse, as she was unable to cope with her troubled son's complex needs, the Times of London reports.
The local council is obliged by law to notify all respondents -- including people with "parental responsibility" -- of the case, the newspaper said.
But her rapist, identified by the UK Press Association as Arshid Hussain, was listed by the council as a respondent even though he did not have parental responsibility nor was he listed as the boy's father on his birth certificate, the Times reports.
CNN has contacted Rotherham Council for comment but has yet to receive a response.
Woodhouse was told during a court hearing that her abuser was consulted on the case and that he would be allowed to attend court and seek legal representation. He may even be authorized visitation rights, or her son could be placed in the custody of Hussain's relatives, the Times reports.
"I was absolutely mortified when I found out and the fact as well that they did not even tell me what they were doing until I was actually at court," she told Good Morning Britain on Wednesday.
The UK Ministry of Justice told CNN that this is "obviously a very distressing incident" and that national government and local authorities are working together urgently to understand and address what happened.
"Local authorities can apply to courts to request permission not to notify parents without parental responsibility about care proceedings, and courts should consider the potential harm to the child and mother when making this decision," the ministry said in a statement.
Although Hussain never made an application to see the child, Woodhouse said a law change will help protect other victims around Britain.
"This is happening all over the country and it needs to stopped," Woodhouse, who speaks widely on child sex exploitation and has written a book on the subject, said in the video.
It is not clear whether this case is the result of an error by the council or indicates a wider problem with the law, the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) told the Press Association.
"Like all councils we must comply with legal requirements, including Practice Directions, and that would include giving notice of proceedings to parents with or without formal parental responsibility," Rotherham Council said in a statement given to the Press Association.
Hussain was jailed in 2016 for 35 years after being convicted of 23 child sex offenses.
A 2014 report found that hundreds of children had been systematically raped, beaten and sex trafficked in Rotherham for more than 12 years.
The revelations also exposed cultural tensions and lack of communication between authorities and the town's ethnic minorities that may have helped stop it.
Social counselors saw evidence of sexual exploitation early on, but turned a blind eye, according to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Exploitation in Rotherham.

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