Tuesday, 2 September 2014

Why, still, is there no-one joining up the dots on UK child exploitation gangs?

I've had the usual attacks from people calling me 'racist' when I've made the suggestion that the despicable situation in Rotherham is far from a one-off.

'I suppose white people are never guilty of similar crimes?'

Actually I'm sure they are and they deserve the full weight of the law being brought down upon them of course. It is perhaps ironic that they probably are more likely to be prosecuted because they are white than ignored for fear of offending a religious section of our community.

As has clearly happened in Rotherham. For decades.

But the thing is that there have been many many other incidences of 'Muslim Gangs' of Pakistani 'Heritage' (what a weasel term that is to be used) exploiting young, vulnerable 'white trash' girls around the UK in recent years.

My point is less about the horrors occurring in Rotherham that are now coming into the full glare of publicity, highlighting the failures of the many agencies supposedly in place to prevent them (other people are talking about that much more eloquently than I ever could); but the fact that this situation is not even close to being a one-off.

And that the main stream media (MSM) is still refusing to join up the dots and recognise that we seem to have a nationwide problem which also seems to me to be based on cultural or religious grounds.

Exactly the same scenario has been played out in the past two years in Oxford, Telford, Rochdale, Warwick (Banbury), Leicester, Coventry, Bradford and many other places. Gangs of Muslim men of Pakistani origin have been convicted - not alleged but convicted - in those and other places, of grooming and sexually exploiting young vulnerable white girls.

This is not speculation on my part but fact.

And yet when reporting these hideous crimes the BBC in particular simply refuses to identify the common denominator. It runs the court case stories of course - these are high profile crimes after all - but it never seems to make mention in any point in the story, about the ethnicity of the perpetrators. It certainly never joins up the dots about similar convictions in other places.

I have read these reports carefully, having spotted the pattern early on, and have found that the only indication of the ethnicity of the perpetrators comes at the end of the editorial when the BBC is obliged to issue the names of those convicted. And they're called Mohammed, Tariq, Shahid etc.

 The BBC and other MSM must know that this is going on and must know that there is a 'cultural' connection. An attitudinal situation in which these men, whilst retaining an iron grip on their own women, via FGM, forced marriages, covering up in public etc., see white girls as 'trash' as worthless, as chattels to be used and exploited as they wish.

Here's the BBC's report in Oxford - link

And Telford - link

And Rochdale - link

And Banbury - link

And Leicester - link 

And Coventry - link

And a coalition launched against child abuse in Bradford more than a year ago - link

You starting to get the picture? No-one else seems to be. And I'm not just talking about the frequency of these crimes, nor yet the connecting factors, but the clear reluctance of the media to identify the ethnicity of the perpetrators. Unless and until we admit that there is a problem, we cannot hope to address it.

Here's the 'Easy Meat' report which outlines the scale and background to the problem much more comprehensively than I can.  It makes difficult reading.

However equally concerning for me is that we're now seeing the BBC seemingly appalled by the cover-ups and ignoring of reports and allegations by the authorities in Rotherham, when actually it - the BBC - has been willfully doing exactly the same thing itself, but on a nationwide scale.

This is a nationwide problem. And this blog is not a one-man vendetta against gangs of Muslim men; it is just me pointing out that Rotherham is not a one-off and that the sooner we can understand this, the sooner we might be able to address the obvious problem and take some action to sort it out.

Racist? If there was a pattern of white gangs emerging I'd be making the same points. Isn't it really about the welfare of young white girls in this country. Many of whom are supposedly in the care of the state?

Isn't it time that we stopped ignoring this situation and did something about it? And time the BBC did its job rather than being the leading proponent of the damaging political correctness that has played a huge part in getting us into this mess in the first place?

Not the jolliest blog ever, but thanks for reading.

 






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