I lost 2 decades of my life. That's not OK!
Sammy
Woodhouse was just 14 when she consented to sex with a 24 year old
Pakistani Man. That was the damning and irresponsible verdict of the
government’s criminal injuries compensation authority.
Ms
Woodhouse, who bravely waived her right to anonymity in order to help
prosecute her attacker and two of his brothers who were part of gang
that groomed and abused 50 girls, was abused by four men as a child.
The
Oxford dictionary defines the age of consent as the
age at which a persons consent to sexual intercourse is
valid in law.
That
age is of course 16. The law is quite clear. It does not allow for
anomolies where the victim was persuaded, threatened, or beaten. It
does not allow for exceptions when the attackers are not from this
country, nor does it allow exceptions for cases where the victim is
poor or vulnerable – it is clear, if the person is under 16, that
person can NEVER give consent.
Prior
to being groomed and abused Sammy was perfectly happy. She told me
that she had lots of friends, was happy, confident and good at
school. Life was great!
All
that changed when she met her main attacker and three other men at
her local shop. A lot of kids hung around there.
As
with many victims of grooming she first thought she was the man’s
girlfriend. At 16 though she recognised the violence and harassment
and made a statement to police. It wasn’t until about 5 years ago
that she fully came to terms with what had actually happened to her
and gave herself the label of victim, not girlfriend.
When
she went to the Police at 16 she had hoped they would help, although
she knew that many of them were helping her attacker.
I
asked her if she blamed the authorities for not protecting her and
the dozens of other victims and she said “the people who are to
blame are the men that abused me and the people who helped and were
involved.”
For
people like most of us, who have never experienced such vile actions
would expect the police to take such matters seriously and act with
the full force of the law to protect the children but that simply
didn’t happen. When asked if she thinks the authorities that turned
a blind eye should be prosecuted she told me “yes I do- there is a
difference in someone raising the alarm and being ignored (I don’t
blame them), to deliberately doing nothing.” she says that the
blame should always start with the attackers “but in my case, they
met him and helped him further, so they are also to blame.”
Sammy
was let down repeatedly by people and organisations that should have
protected her.
Rotherham
MP Sarah Champion was forced to resign her shadow cabinet role after
writing in a newspaper article that Britain has a problem with
British Pakistani men raping and exploiting white girls.
Ms
Champion has said her comments were edited and stripped of nuance,
but resigned from her position in Jeremy Corbyn’s team.
I
asked Ms Woodhouse if she thought Champion was right to resign. She
said “Sarah was very accurate and should not have stood down, she
should have stood her ground.” she added “it’s important we
don’t only talk about one race, but we do have to address it.
Otherwise, victims voices will be lost.”
Some
people have called for South Yorkshire Police to be disbanded since
the scandal. I asked Sammy if she thought the force were fit for
purpose. “No! They weren’t fit for purpose” she said, “a lot
has changed but it’s no where near good enough. If the system was
fit for purpose we wouldn’t have so many abused and failed
children. The Government need to recognise and step in. The Police
are over worked and under staffed and don’t understand grooming
properly. There is a lot of work to do!”
Sammy
Woodhouse has shown amazing strength courage and resilience to become
one of the most prominent campaigners for victims of child abuse,
making regular appearances on daytime TV, receiving huge support.
She is championing Sammy's Law, a campaign to change the law to allow
victims of grooming and abuse to have their criminal records expunged
where they were directed to commit those crimes by their attackers.
The campaign is being backed by several Police Chief’s, MP’s and
child protection experts in a bid to minimise the impact on victims.
I
asked Sammy where she found the strength to be a survivor and no
longer a victim. She told me she had always been a person that didn’t
like to sit around moping and feeling sorry for herself. She said “I
also don't like to be seen as a victim as it always makes me feel
weak. We have to get on with life. There’s only one person that can
really change things in my life, and that is me. I want my legacy to
be something my children are proud of. I want to be able to say when
I look back at my life that I made a difference and helped others. I
can say that now as before I couldn’t. To do this I had to accept
help and support and not avoid it.”
On
her campaign she says “Yes! Victims and survivors records should be
quashed. We shouldn’t be blamed and criminalised for being abused,
We need to take into consideration if those people are now a risk and
still offending as some do. We need to look at people as individuals.
I have started Sammy’s law asking for this to be put in place. The
first step is common sense and people getting a fu##ing grip. IT’S
NEVER A CHILD’S FAULT.!!!!!!”
I
asked her if she believes children in Rotherham are still at risk
from grooming gangs. She
told me “of course children are still at risk. It will always
happen, we have to prevent as much as possible and keep the awareness
going. We will never stop it but we can prevent it. Things are much
better in Rotherham but abuse happens everywhere not just here.”
Despite
the torment that Sammy endured she appears to be coming out of the
other side a proud, selfless, articulate woman who family and friends
must be extremely proud of and
an inspiration to the hundreds and thousands of victims out there
still searching for justice.
My
final question to to the remarkable Sammy Woodhouse was what her
future aspirations are and whether she can have a normal life.
Her
reply was “I want to prevent child abuse as much as possible and
make national changes, I’d like to be part of knowing every child
in the country is more safe”. Her parting comment was “Define
normal! What happened will always remain with me but I’m determined
to move forward from it and not let it hold me back. I’ve lost two
decades of my life. My life is only starting now at the age of 32 –
that’s not OK.”