Diversity is Not “Nice” When it Involves This … By Richard Miller (London)
The story centres on Hamdan Alshamsi, a 21-year-old university student from Dubai, who was jailed for six years in the UK after sexually abusing a 13-year-old British girl. Alshamsi groomed her online via Snapchat for months, lying about his age, claiming he was 16, to build trust. By December 2024, he'd convinced her to meet in person. On Christmas Eve, he flew over seven hours from Dubai to the UK, booking a £250-a-night seafront room at the Hilton Brighton Metropole. On December 27, he ordered an Uber to bring the girl to the hotel, where he showered her with gifts before assaulting her over two days.
Police got a tip-off, traced her phone, and scoured Brighton's seafront for hours. They stormed the hotel, rescued the girl, and arrested Alshamsi on December 28. Sussex Police praised their Brighton Response and Neighbourhood Policing Teams for the swift action. In court, Alshamsi's messages, explicitly discussing sex, nailed him. The judge didn't hold back: six years in prison, a stark warning to online predators. The girl's left reeling, her family shattered, but alive thanks to the cops' hustle.
Now, let's get to the real issue. Diversity's paraded as this golden ticket, but cases like this show it can import horrors that shred the social fabric. Alshamsi's a product of a globalised world: wealthy, mobile, and armed with tech to prey across borders. This isn't "cultural exchange"—it's a predator exploiting openness to devastate a kid.
First, the border-hopping menace: Alshamsi's UAE roots gave him the cash and freedom to jet-set for crime. Dubai's glitz, oil money, luxury, let him play the big shot, luring a vulnerable girl from 3,500 miles away. Diversity's fine when it's trade or food stalls, not when it's a pipeline for rich creeps to target your daughters. The Daily Mail's March 25 take notes he flew in specifically for this, no holiday, just harm. Open skies shouldn't mean open season on kids.
Second, the cultural clash: he lied about his age, exploited her trust, then held her captive in a £250 room like it's a game. That's not a "misunderstanding"—it's a calculated violation, enabled by a system too lax to flag a solo 21-year-old booking a luxe hotel for a "meetup."
Third, the cost to Britain: this isn't a two-way street. The UK gets a traumatised teen, a strained police force, and a six-year prison bill, Alshamsi gets a plane ride and a slap. Diversity's cheerleaders don't foot the therapy costs or patrol the streets. The Express (March 26) frames it as a "two-day ordeal,"understated for a life-altering nightmare. Meanwhile, the system's so scared of "xenophobia" it might've hesitated to profile him sooner. That's not nice, it's naive.
Critics—like the Leftist set—might say this is one bad apple, not a diversity flaw. Sure, Brits abuse kids too. But this case screams imported risk: a guy with no ties, no oversight, using wealth and distance to strike and vanish. Native predators are bad enough, why add international ones? Diversity's not nice when it's a 13-year-old sobbing in a hotel while a foreigner's jet lag wears off.
The UK has faced a grim scandal over the past two decades involving organised grooming gangs, groups of men systematically targeting vulnerable children, particularly White girls, for sexual exploitation, rape, and prostitution. High-profile cases like Rotherham, Rochdale, Telford, and Oldham have exposed the scale: thousands of victims, often from working-class backgrounds, preyed upon in plain sight.
In Rotherham, a 2014 report by Alexis Jay pegged the victim count at over 1,400 girls, mostly white, aged 11-17, abused between 1997 and 2013. Perpetrators, largely British-Pakistani men, used grooming tactics, gifts, alcohol, drugs, to lure girls from care homes or broken families, then raped them repeatedly, trafficked them, or forced them into prostitution. Rochdale's 2012 case saw nine men convicted for abusing 47 girls; Telford's toll hit 1,000+ victims over decades, per a 2022 inquiry. A GB News piece from March 23, 2025, quotes "Jade," an Oldham survivor, describing how she was targeted as a teen, plied with attention, then brutalised by South Asian men.
The pattern's stark: perpetrators, often from Pakistani Muslim communities, exploited cultural and social gaps. Victims were "easy prey," White, poor, unprotected, seen as outside the abusers' moral orbit. Police and councils, fearing racism accusations, ignored complaints for years. The 2021 Home Office report on group-based child sexual exploitation (CSE) notes most offenders in these cases were of Pakistani heritage, though it stresses CSE isn't exclusive to one group, White men dominate broader child sex offenses, with the larger population.
Diversity's sold as this warm, fuzzy strength, but here it's a nightmare. The grooming gang saga shows multiculturalism gone rotten, where imported attitudes and tribal loyalties clash hard with British norms, and kids pay the price.
First, the cultural disconnect: these gangs didn't just stumble into crime, they targeted white girls specifically, often with a racial edge. "Tens of thousands" of White British girls were raped by Pakistani gangs, hushed up to dodge "racist" labels. Studies, like the 2017 Quilliam report, suggest some perpetrators saw White girls as "fair game," less human than their own community's women, rooted in misogyny from parts of South Asian culture. Diversity's supposed to enrich, not enable predators to pick victims by skin color.
Second, the failure of integration: decades of immigration without spine, letting parallel societies fester, bred this mess. Rotherham's council knew by 2002 but sat on it, per the Jay report, scared of "community tensions." Police called victims "white trash" or willing, per The Times (2014). This isn't harmony; it's a state too weak to protect its own, bowing to diversity's altar while girls got sold.It is "systematic exploitation," not random crime, unassimilated enclaves turned into hunting grounds.
Third, the human cost: "nice" diversity doesn't leave 1,400 girls in Rotherham with PTSD, STDs, or dead-end lives. Telford's inquiry found one victim raped 1,000 times before 16—where's the upside? This isn't a melting pot; it's a meat grinder. The GB News Oldham story shows "Jade" still broken, her dad powerless, diversity's cheerleaders don't live this reality. It's not nice when your kid's a statistic because someone's scared to name the problem.
Critics—say, the Leftist crowd—argue this isn't about diversity; it's poverty, power, universal male violence. But the ethnic skew's no mirage: the Home Office says Pakistani men over-index in these gangs versus their 2 percent population share. Ignoring that shields the guilty, not the victims. Diversity's fine (maybe) until it's a cover for rape rings—then it's a lie we can't afford.
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