SarahChampion had been asked to quit as the shadow equalities minister by party leader Jeremy Corbyn last month after she wrote a newspaper column in wake of 17 men, mostly of Pakistani origin, being convicted in Newcastle of 90 sex and drug offences including rape, sexual activity with a child, conspiracy to incite prostitution and child trafficking.
"We commend Sarah Champion and the Muslim councillor Amina Lone for speaking up on a clear trend in criminality: the conviction of men of largely Pakistani Muslim heritage in sexual-grooming cases," reads a joint letter by Hindu Council UK and Network of Sikh Organisations published in 'The Times'.
"We are not willing to see the betrayal of victims, who are being sacrificed on the altar of political correctness. It's not racist or Islamophobic to raise a matter of significant public concern," their letter notes.
Champion had written inan article in the 'The Sun' last month: "Britain has a problem with British Pakistani men raping and exploiting white girls. There. I said it. Does that make me a racist? Or am I just prepared to call out this horrifying problem for what it is?"
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Amina Lone later claimed she was rebuked by the party leadership for speaking out on her behalf.
The letter argues that it was not just "white girls who fall victim" to grooming gangs, but youngsters from their respective communities.
"The common denominator is that victims almost always tend to be non-Muslim girls. We are dismayed by the Labour leadership's weak response," it says.
Professor Alexis Jay's report had found that more than 1,400 children had been groomed, trafficked and raped in the town over a 16-year period.
Similar cases of grooming, involving a majority of Pakistani-origin men, have also come to light in other regions of England, including Newcastle.
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