Westminster under suspicion as former PM faces child abuse claim

05 Aug, 2015

Allegations linking former prime minister Edward Heath to child sex abuse threatened fresh disgrace for Britain's political establishment Tuesday as claims of high-level historic paedophilia pile up. Heath led Britain between 1970 and 1974, taking it into the European Economic Community in 1973, and was known as a dour bachelor who loved sailing and classical music. He died in 2005 at the age of 89.
Now he has become the most senior figure to join the ranks of prominent Westminster politicians accused of sexually abusing children, many of them posthumously. The story comes as Britain enters a crucial stage in its efforts to investigate claims that people in social elites repeatedly carried out and concealed child sex abuse in the second half of the 20th century.
"I'm in absolutely no doubt that there were a significant number of politicians and many others in high society... who were committing child sexual abuse and probably continue to do so," Simon Danczuk, an MP with the main opposition Labour party and a leading campaigner on the issue, told Sky News television. Whether Heath was among them is now the subject of fierce debate.
Heath was drawn into the scandal after police watchdog the Independent Police Complaints Commission said Monday it would investigate a retired policeman's claim that a prosecution was dropped in the 1990s when the accused threatened to expose the ex-premier. The Daily Mirror newspaper on Tuesday carried a claim from a man alleging he was raped by Heath in 1961, aged 12. The BBC also reported that Heath was now being directly investigated by Scotland Yard over child sex abuse claims.
Heath, who led Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative party, is not the first politician accused of abuse. Others include the late Leon Brittan, interior minister under prime minister Margaret Thatcher, and then a European commissioner; Cyril Smith, a Liberal MP who died in 2010; and Greville Janner, an ex-Labour MP and member of the House of Lords. Last month, it emerged that in 1986, the MI5 intelligence service had urged a cover-up of claims that an unidentified MP "has a penchant for small boys".

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