Martin Robinson & Leon Watson – Daily
Mail Oct 2, 2012
Fresh allegations that a ‘leading
politician from the Thatcher years’ was at the centre of a widespread
paedophile ring were aired on the BBC’s Newsnight programme Friday
night.
Alleged
abuse victim Steven Messham told Newsnight he was raped more than a
dozen times after being picked up in a car that turned at night at the
children’s home in North Wales where he lived.
Newsnight described the man as ‘a
shadowy figure of high public standing’, but failed to name him.
Mr Messham, who made his allegations to
the North Wales Child Abuse Tribunal but claims they were ignored, said
‘various things would happen’ at the hands of a senior Tory politician
and he was ‘basically raped’.
Mr Meesham was one of hundreds of
children abused in the 1970s and 80s – exploitation brought to light by
the Waterhouse Inquiry Report in 2000.
But he told BBC Newsnight the inquiry
uncovered just a fraction of the abuse.
As a teenager he went to the police and
made statements against the senior public figure, but claimed officers
told him he was a liar.
A second anonymous alleged victim
reported the public figure to police, but was also rebuffed.
He said: ‘When I made a statement to
the police the police crossed [his name] out and said there was no
point.’
Earlier today, a senior Whitehall
source expressed dismay at the chaos engulfing the BBC and suggested the
corporation was trying to divert attention away from the Savile scandal.
He said: ‘This looks like they are
trying to create a smokescreen to divert attention away from what
happened with the Savile programme. That is disgraceful.’
Tory MP Rob Wilson said: ‘The danger is
that the people at the BBC think that after not running the Jimmy Savile
paedophile programme that they need to be more editorially robust and
muscular.
‘But if that is what is behind this, it
is absolutely crazy. Now if they don’t screen this programme, it will
look leave horrible rumours circulating on the Internet about innocent
people.’
Before the programme started the editor
of the London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism, Iain Overton,
mysteriously tweeted that a ‘senior political figure’ was to be outed as
a child-abuser on Newsnight.
However, the programme said at the end
of tonight’s report that there was ‘not enough evidence’ to name him.
Following the end of Newsnight, the BBC refused to comment.
However MailOnline understands the
investigation about the unnamed man, who is alive, is being looked at by
the BBC’s legal team.
Immediately after, viewers expressed
their anger that the BBC failed to name the suspect on micro-blogging
site Twitter.
Referring to presenter Jeremy Paxman,
Piers Morgan tweeted: ‘So #Newsnight bottled it again tonight re
exposing a paedophile? And they have the gall to mock tabloids? Grow a
pair, Paxo.’
Another tweeter, Brixtonite, said:
‘Incredibly irresponsible of #Newsnight to suggest they were going to
reveal name of paedophile then not do so. Speculation & gossip now rife.
‘I don’t, and I don’t want to know
about rumours. I want Newsnight to do decent thing and take what they
know to police.’
Newsnight took the decision despite Mr
Overton’s crystal clear message online: ‘If all goes well we’ve got a
Newsnight out tonight about a very senior political figure who is a
paedophile.’
Following the broadcast, MailOnline
approached Mr Overton for a comment, but he was not available.
Mr Overton’s bureau is a not-for-profit
organisation which works with news outlets to publish in-depth
investigations. It says it has been working on this project for the BBC.
It piles more pressure on the
beleaguered corporation after last month it was revealed Newsnight
dumped an investigation into paedophile Sir Jimmy Savile, even though
they had interviewed his victims.
Savile with Jaconelli, another paedophile pervert
It
took a ITV documentary to reveal that Jimmy Savile had carried out
decades of abuse involving hundreds of children, some of whom were
attacked on BBC premises.
It emerged that Newsnight had carried
out its own investigation into the paedophile DJ – including an
interview with the same victim in the ITV documentary- nearly a year
before.
A BBC team spent six weeks probing
allegations that the presenter abused pupils at a school in Surrey,
speaking to at least four women who claimed they had been assaulted or
knew about events.
But the report was shelved at the last
minute at the request of the programme’s editor Peter Rippon. It was not
until last month that the BBC aired its own investigation into the
scandal, on Panorama.
It covered both Savile’s crimes and the
Corporation’s reaction. Mr Rippon stood aside from his role at Newsnight
after the BBC said his explanation for shelving the story was
‘inaccurate or incomplete’.
The corporation’s director general
George Entwistle was hauled before a select committee last week to
explain why and how it happened.
He denied that the broadcaster helped
cover up allegations that Savile preyed on women.
And now there are huge doubts about
whether this latest investigation into the mystery political figure will
be broadcast.
Channel Four political correspondent
Michael Crick says he has spoken to the man at the centre of the
allegations, who denied that he was a paedophile and said he would sue
if Newsnight broadcasts anything on him tonight.
He also added that the man said he had
not been approached for a comment by the BBC, despite it being earmarked
for tonight’s Newsnight.
The Metropolitan Police have told
MailOnline they have not been handed anything on the subject of the
investigation.
The row comes after Labour MP Tom
Watson shocked the Commons last month by alleging there was ‘clear
intelligence’ linking a former Number 10 aide with a notorious group of
sex offenders.
He has compiled a dossier allegations
for the Metropolitan Police, which is currently dealing with hundreds of
allegations of abuse against Jimmy Savile.
But it is unclear if this is linked to
the Newsnight investigation.
Mr Watson suggested a Number 10 insider
was named in files connected to the conviction of a child porn smuggler
in the early 1990s.
He told the Commons: ‘The evidence used
to convict paedophile Peter Righton, if it still exists, contains clear
intelligence of a widespread paedophile ring.
‘One of its members boasts of his links
to a senior aide of a former prime minister who says he could smuggle
indecent images of children from abroad.
‘The leads were not followed up, but if
the file still exists I want to ensure that the Metropolitan Police
secure the evidence, re-examine it and investigate clear intelligence
suggesting a powerful paedophile network linked to Parliament and No
10.’
Mr Cameron said Mr Watson ‘raises a
very difficult and complex case’ and he was ‘not entirely sure which
former prime minister he is referring to’.
Source
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