It is a real shame that in 2015 that a supposed respected national broadsheet newspaper still feels comfortable in printing such a headline on its front page.

We know what the newspaper is implying. So, let’s not dress this up and try to defend blatant incitement.

This sort of misleading headline in the Times only serves to push the notion that religion was to blame for these crimes.

Are we to see similar headlines in the case of the Jimmy Savile and the host of celebrities who took part in historic sex crimes? Was this the fault of Christians? Was this a Christian problem? Or a middle aged white problem? We would think not. To suggest this would be nonsense.

373 children were subjected to the most heinous sexual abuse, grooming, rape and trafficking. The actions of the Asian men involved were criminal, abhorrent and unforgivable.

But so were the actions of the authorities. The report says police treated abuse victims as if they were 'wayward girls.'

Social workers said that the victims had ‘chosen’ their abuse as a ‘lifestyle choice.’ The focus now should be on the fact that police and social services failed to take victims seriously.

Rather than calling for a debate on ‘Muslims,’ let’s scrutinise the problem we have in this country at the institutional level.

Police failed the victims. Social services failed the victims. The council failed the victims.

The report does not vilify Muslims or Islam? But the Times seems to think it is a ‘Muslim problem’.

Rather, the report is unequivocally damning of the broad scale negligence across the different disciplines.

The vile men have been convicted and imprisoned but who will be held accountable for not acting upon the abuse that was reported?