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MPs have requested answers from Channel 4 regarding serious allegations of sexual assault related to the reality show Married at First Sight UK. The House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee is concerned about participant safety in reality television.
A group of MPs has written to Channel 4 to ask for answers about what they say are "horrifying" allegations relating to reality series Married at First Sight UK.
A recent investigation by BBC Panorama heard from two women who said they were raped by their on-screen husbands, and a third who alleged a non-consensual sex act.
The House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee has written to both Channel 4 and broadcast regulator Ofcom with questions about their actions and responses to the claims.
"The horrifying allegations about Married at First Sight raise serious concerns over whether enough is being done to protect people taking part in reality television," the committee's chairwoman Caroline Dinenage MP said.
"Both Channel 4 and Ofcom, as the broadcasting regulator, have urgent questions to answer."
The letter to Channel 4 asks the network about the complaints process for contestants on the programme, the steps taken to ensure the allegations were fully investigated, and the review announced by the broadcaster.
It also asks about Channel 4's approach to duty of care to participants on its other reality TV programmes.
The committee's letter to Ofcom, meanwhile, asks about the regulator's role in the complaints process, its powers to investigate potential breaches of the broadcasting code, and the timeline for launching its own investigation into the Married at First Sight allegations.
Channel 4 has commissioned an external review of welfare on the show "after being presented with serious allegations of wrongdoing".
The channel's chief executive Priya Dogra has said she believes the broadcaster "acted quickly, appropriately, sensitively and with well-being front and centre" when concerns were raised.
Lawyers for CPL, the independent production company that makes the UK version of the show, said its welfare system was "gold standard" and industry-leading, and that it acted appropriately in all these cases.
Married at First Sight UK - known to many as MAFS - sees single people agree to "marry" total strangers, after meeting for the first time at their mock weddings.
The marriages are not legally binding, but viewers see the couples go on "honeymoon", before moving in together and navigating their relationships - all while being filmed, almost every day.
Allegations include two women claiming they were raped by their on-screen husbands and a third woman alleging a non-consensual sex act.
MPs have written to Channel 4 and Ofcom, demanding answers about their responses to the allegations and participant safety.
The inquiry is led by Caroline Dinenage MP, chairwoman of the House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee.

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