The problem is, as I said before, the general reluctance and often outright refusal to criticise religion and the cultural practices it sanctions – and that needs to change. Wrong is wrong, but religion is deemed to be beyond criticism, regardless of what it does, and therefore arranged marriages are overlooked, and the mutilated victims of FGM who arrive at our hospitals are treated and sent away again without a word said – and so it continues. Every single incident that is discovered should be reported – and the perpetrators dealt with severely. However, that doesn’t happen because they are members of an ethnic minority – also deemed beyond criticism – and ‘respect’ for their beliefs, quite bizarrely, appears to take precedence over our own ethics. That is clearly demonstrated in our hospitals themselves, where Muslim staff, contrary to the rules of hygiene that apply to all other staff, are allowed to wear long sleeved clothing – but that aside what it amounts to is that instead of ensuring that to the best of our ability we protect the vulnerable, we turn a blind eye. In an effort to make allowances for the beliefs of others – albeit beliefs that actively endorse the appalling abuse of the young and defenceless - we are abandoning our own principles and in doing so we are allowing our own moral compass to spin awry – and frankly that is a sad and shameful indictment upon our society.