MBE for Rotherham youth worker who exposed child sexual exploitation

A youth worker whose revelations about child sexual exploitation in Rotherham led to the exposure of a scandal that shocked the nation has been awarded the MBE.

Jayne Senior said she was honoured but saddened that the award has come in the wake of so many "ruined and devastated" young lives.

Mrs Senior said the honour is another vindication of her stance in the South Yorkshire town after years of being accused of lying and exaggerating.

But she said this public recognition is "bittersweet" as it comes after the exploitation of hundreds of children in a scandal that could have been stopped if she had been listened to.

"I'm very pleased and I'm honoured," she said. "But it is a little bittersweet.

"I think it's a great honour, I really do. I think it's an opportunity to keep this in the public domain because it's not just about Rotherham, it's across the UK and we've got to keep raising this profile for kids now and for the future.

"But getting an award for what happened in Rotherham is the bit that saddens me - all those lives ruined and devastated. That's the bit that upsets me.

"But, if it gives me an opportunity to keep talking about it and to continue supporting victims and family members and raising awareness so this never happens on this scale in another town, then it's a great honour."

Jayne Senior at the Women of the Year Awards 2015 Credit: Press Association

Mrs Senior worked for the Risky Business youth project in Rotherham during the period in which girls in the town were being groomed, raped, trafficked, and forced into prostitution on a huge scale.

Risky Business repeatedly tried to alert authorities to what was happening but was largely ignored and eventually closed down.

Mrs Senior eventually collaborated with Andrew Norfolk of The Times, and started a chain of events which led to the Jay Report in 2014.

The report shocked the nation when it revealed more than 1,400 children were subjected to child sexual exploitation in Rotherham between 1997 and 2013 and ignored by police and social services.

Further vindication of Mrs Senior's actions came with the hard-hitting Casey Report into Rotherham Council.

Then, earlier this year, a gang led by three brothers was jailed for a total of more than 100 years for crimes against children in the town.

These convictions came as a huge new investigation into what happened in Rotherham began to take shape led by the National Crime Agency.

The agency will soon have more than 100 officers working in the town and is looking at hundreds of suspects.

Click here for a full list of everyone from the Calendar region awarded in the Queen's Birthday Honours List 2016