UNITED KINGDOM
Sky News
Anushka Asthana
Political Correspondent
Will the refusal of 28 survivors and campaigners to co-operate kill the Home Office inquiry into historical child abuse?
From what I am hearing, officials are determined to push ahead.
They believe they have tried hard to include victim groups in their thinking since Fiona Woolf became the inquiry’s second chair to step down.
While this news will come as a blow, they will focus on the fact that not all survivor groups have signed up.
Others also have similar misgivings but they want the inquiry to get going.
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