Child rape and grooming by ethnic gangs in the UK, according to some estimates, reached one million victims. This is at the level of a war crime, if not exceeding the worst crimes in history. Yet, the UK police, really a New World Order force, allowed the rapes to go on for years, claiming that exposure might stir up “racism.” So much for the rule of law! Articles covering all this, with documentation from the mainstream press has been published at Alor.org previously.
The latest news is that an independent report into child grooming in the UK has found that police often failed to record the ethnicity of both suspects and victims. Why is that? Because, I believe, the victims were white, with some Sikh girls, and the offenders were non-whites of migrant origin, a protected class by the ruling elites. It is another nasty part of the Great Replacement.
“Jihad Watch reported in 2016 about the “scandalous Rotherham case of 1,400 girls sexually assaulted by …. men while the establishment negligently sat by and did nothing out of fear of being branded ‘racist.’ The assaults continued in even larger numbers against young girls, reaching a staggering 1 million by estimations.
In 2020, “the UK Home Office whitewashed its report on … rape gangs and issued it with the risible claim that most of the perpetrators were white Britons….. The report was only intended for internal use, the department announced. Publication would not be ‘in the public interest’.”
Dan Hodges from the Daily Mail described the situation further:
“A number of explanations were offered for this dramatic change of stance. ‘Part of it is the Home Office culture,’ a Minister told me. ‘There’s always pressure from officials to tone things down. They don’t like explosions. So they look at you and say, ‘You do realise that if we make this public, then the next question will be: ‘So what are you going to do about it?’”
It eventually became public that Sikh girls were also being abused by … rape gangs, because they, too, were deemed to be uncovered, inferior infidels.
The massive systemic abuse persisted in Britain, because authorities did nothing to put an end to it. The issue continues. Now:
An independent report into child grooming in the UK has found that police often failed to record the ethnicity of both suspects and victims. …
Also noted in the current Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse report:
A number of children were only being classified as “at risk” of sexual abuse, despite their being “clear evidence of actual harm having occurred”, such as the victimised children having contracted sexually transmitted diseases.”
Many argue that the race, country of origin, or creed of a person should not matter in reporting crime, but it can matter. Authorities do not take into consideration the fact that ideology matters. If an ideology influences people to act against the safety and security of the populace, then proponents of that ideology who commit crime need to be identified, and the ideology itself studied. …
“Child Grooming Report Finds UK Police Failed to Record Ethnicity of Suspects and Victims,” by Peter Caddle, Breitbart, February 2, 2022:
An independent report into child grooming in the UK has found that police often failed to record the ethnicity of both suspects and victims.
An independent inquiry into the sexual abuse of children in the UK has found that police often failed to record the ethnicity of both suspects and victims involved.
The inquiry’s findings are the latest in a long line of reports and investigations which have found that the ethnicity of alleged child sex offenders was often a point of contention in police action.
According to a report published by The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, there were “widespread failures” by police to record the ethnicity of perpetrators in Durham, Swansea, Tower Hamlets, St. Helens, and a host of other locations.
Police also frequently failed to record the ethnicity of victims, with over 50 per cent of victims in Warwickshire in particular not having their ethnicities identified.
As a result of these failings, the report noted that police did not have an accurate view of networked child abuse taking place in the reviewed locations.
“None of the police forces or local authorities in the case study areas had an accurate understanding of the networks sexually exploiting children in their area,” the report said.
“The improved collection and use of data is critical to the response to child sexual exploitation if these offences are to be properly investigated and resourced,” it continued.
Also noted by the report was the fact that a number of children were only being classified as “at risk” of sexual abuse, despite their being “clear evidence of actual harm having occurred”, such as the victimised children having contracted sexually transmitted diseases…”