The Rape Gangs of the UK By Richard Miller (London)

 

According to former UK detective Maggie Oliver, who has bravely taken on the ethnic rape gang issue in the UK, the ethnic rape gangs continue to target British children, mostly white. This large-scale rape industry has been going on for many years. What needs to be said here is that this is but another example of the Great Replacement. There would probably be less rapes of children even if an enemy army had invaded. I dare say that if the USSR red army, a symbol of evil, had invaded Britain in the post-World War II period, there would have been far fewer rapes than what we see now. So, go figure that one out.

 

https://www.jihadwatch.org/2021/08/uk-muslim-rape-gang-police

“Former detective turned grooming gang whistleblower Maggie Oliver said that the apologies offered in the lastest review to child rape victims in Bradford are “pointless” and that the scourge of rape gangs persists “everywhere” in the UK.

An independent review into five child grooming cases in Bradford, West Yorkshire since 2001 found that “children suffered abuse no child should have to experience”.

The review repeated the oft-heard refrain from such findings that the Bradford Partnership “fully accepts more needs to be done”.

“We want to apologise to the young people identified in this report and any others where the actions of agencies in Bradford has failed to protect them from child sexual exploitation.”

One of the victims highlighted in the report, referred to as Anna, was placed into the care of foster parents whose son was her abuser.

Anna was then forced into an Islamic wedding with her abuser after becoming pregnant at the age of fifteen, all of which, she claimed, was sanctioned by Bradford authorities.

“While in the ‘care’ of these adults, she was subjected to further sexual abuse and exploitation, domestic abuse, including assaults and coercion and what we would now recognise as domestic slavery,” the report revealed.

Anna said that the agencies “just ignored the abuse”, destroying her childhood.

Anti-abuse campaigner Maggie Oliver, who quit the Greater Manchester Police in 2012 in order to expose the grooming scandal in Rochdale, said of the review: “It’s another apology where they say lessons will be learned and all the rest of it.”

“We’re now 15 years on and as a result of what I learned after resigning, I started the Maggie Oliver Foundation where we help survivors and victims of child abuse every single day,” she told GB News.

“I can tell you that in the last six months, we are dealing with 31 cases from West Yorkshire, alone.

“Bradford is just another case, this is going on everywhere. What we’re finding in the foundation is that the worst cases that we are aware of are West Yorkshire and in [Greater Manchester]”.

Another victim cited in the latest review, Fiona Goddard — who waived her life-long right to anonymity — said that the Bradford police and council had many opportunities to stop her abuse and “nip it in the bud” but they “never did”.

Goddard, who was the victim of sexual abuse by the 2008 Bradford grooming gangs, said: “I reported it multiple times – physical abuse, sexual abuse or rapes – and they were never followed up on.”

In 2019, nine Bradford men, Basharat Khaliq, Saeed Akhtar, Naveed Akhtar, Parvaze Ahmed, Zeeshan Ali, Fahim Iqbal, Izar Hussain, Mohammed Usman and Kieran Harris were convicted of rape and inciting child prostitution against girls as young as fourteen years old starting in 2008.

The jury in the trial heard that local authorities were aware that at least one of the girl victims in the case was “being picked up by multiple Asian males in smart cars”.

One of the victims in the case told the court: “I struggle to leave the house due to anxiety which prevents me from living a full life, and have spent my adult life on medication,” adding that “the drug and alcohol misuse has had a large effect on my health, such as abnormal liver function.”

Maggie Oliver said that the survivors of grooming gangs and other child abuse crimes feel as if they have no one to turn to, saying: “They’re being blamed, they’re being ignored. There are cover-ups and there is a lack of concern.

“These children are in care they are taken away from homes because they are deemed to be at risk. I would argue that they are being put into situations that are even more risky than when they’re in their own home”

“It destroys lives and it’s about time that we did something as a country to address it.”

https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2021/04/07/rape-gangs-whistleblower-predators-still-at-large-due-to-institutional-cowardice/

“Police detective turned rape gangs whistleblower Maggie Oliver has blamed the “institutional cowardice” of Britain’s courts and police forces for the fact that convicted predators are receiving soft sentences and, in many cases, remain at large in their victims’ communities.

The issue of so-called “grooming” gangs, comprised largely of Muslims of Pakistani heritage who targeted mostly white working-class girls and young women, received a fresh flicker of attention in recent days after a leading tabloid published pictures of Rochdale predator Qari Abdul Rauf walking the streets of the city where he preyed on his young victims once again, having served just two and a half years of a six-year sentence, with the Conservative party-led government having failed to deliver on its promises to deport him.

“This week we learned that the betrayal of [rape gang] victims continues,” wrote Oliver in an article for the Daily Mail, noting that “when civic authorities, including the police and courts, succumb to institutional cowardice, inertia, warped priorities and moral collapse in the face of brutish criminality” the ideal etched in stone on the Old Bailey — ‘Protect the Children of the Poor and Punish the Wrongdoer’.

“As a criminal with foreign nationality, the judge ordered that [Rauf] be kicked out of the country on his release under current immigration rules, and returned to his native Pakistan… [but] the authorities failed to act, allowing Rauf’s lawyers to cynically deploy human rights regulations to thwart his deportation,” the former policewoman accused.

Victims, she said, “were let down by the state when the grooming first occurred, and they are still being let down by officialdom’s refusal to uphold the law, keep them informed or respect their human rights.

“In sharp contrast, Abdul Rauf’s so-called human rights have been revered by the system — just as he and his other gang members have been lavished with expensive legal aid.”

Oliver further noted that, when it came time to try rape gang predators like Rauf for their crimes, “the Crown Prosecution Service [CPS] took the easy route of bringing only limited charges against the defendants; instead of rape they were charged with trafficking and conspiracy to engage in sex,” and that judges — despite “tough talk” — imposed only short sentences, made even shorter by the fact that criminals in Britain are, often unbeknownst to the public, usually entitled to automatic early release on licence halfway through their terms.

Mainstream media has done little to elucidate this situation to the public, and in some respects has helped to create a false picture of how harshy rape gang predators are being punished — for example, by reporting that Telford rape gang ringleader Ahdel ‘Eddie’ Ali had been locked up for 26 years when he was first sentenced.

Technically, the courts had indeed handed him 26 years, but over multiple different sentences for different crimes, which were all the be served concurrently — i.e. at the same time — so that all but the longest were essentially meaningless.

This, combined with the fact that only half of his “custodial” sentences actually had to be served in custody before automatic release on licence, meant he ended up back on the street after just eight years.

Oliver noted that, as rape gang members are not prevented from returning to the communities where they perpetrated their crimes, some victims have now found themselves running into their abusers in public, with police, probation officers, and other officials not even having bothered to inform them of their release.

Oliver noted one incident in which a victim who had been abused from the age of 13 encountered her abuser in a local supermarket, and “fled the shop in hysterics and was immediately on the phone to me. ‘Why is he here? Why is he still in Rochdale?’ she sobbed down the line.

“The only answer is that instead of looking after the victims, the state prefers to safeguard the predators.”

Call it what it is, anarcho-tyranny, the UK version.

 

 

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Monday, 25 November 2024

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