Hundreds More Muslim Rape Gang Cases Discovered in UK
The
Muslim rape gang scandal in Britain just keeps getting worse. Last
August, the BBC reported that "at least 1,400 children were subjected to
appalling sexual exploitation in Rotherham between 1997 and 2013, a
report has found. Children as young as 11 were raped by multiple
perpetrators, abducted, trafficked to other cities in England, beaten
and intimidated, it said." Five months later, not only has little been
done to combat this scourge, but it has grown exponentially worse:
hundreds of new cases have been discovered, and one of the victims says
that those who abused her are "untouchable."
Sky News reported
that in addition to the 1,400 cases revealed last year, "hundreds more
cases were known to authorities prior to its publication and that
hundreds more are being reported." The victim who spoke to Sky News said
that now all these months after the news first broke of the extent of
this savage exploitation, "It's still going on if not worse, because now
they're having to hide it more. I'm still seeing my abusers driving
young girls in their car. They're untouchable." She said of the police
that "all they care about is getting a statement. Six months on we've
had no arrests, we've had no charges, evidence is still being lost."
These
words were reported a month after a team of government commissioners
took over the Rotherham Council, after finding it in "complete denial"
about the scandal.
Why is this happening? What illness has
overtaken British authorities, such that they are covering up these
cases and doing little or nothing to apprehend offenders? The answer
lies in the fact that these are not simply criminal cases involving
outlaw gangs. The rape gangs are made up of Muslims who believe that the
Qur'an (4:3; 4:24;
23:1-6; 33:50) and Islamic law allow them to capture non-Muslim girls
and press them into sexual slavery, as we have also seen the jihadists
of Boko Haram and the Islamic State also do in the past year. And
British authorities have feared to confront the problem in its full
magnitude because they're afraid of the stigma of stigmas in the
twenty-first century West: being called "racist."
In Rotherham,
British officials "described their nervousness about identifying the
ethnic origins of perpetrators for fear of being thought as racist;
others remembered clear direction from their managers not to do so." The
very idea that "racism" was a factor here reflects the myopia of the
British government and media elites, who consistently frame issues
regarding jihad terror and Islamic supremacism as racial. In fact,
however, the rape gangs operated not because they were made up of men of
Pakistani origin, but because they were made up of Muslims who believed
that infidel girls were nothing more than, in the immortal words of the
Grand Mufti of Australia a few years ago, "uncovered meat."
In
any case, the fear of being stigmatized with the "racist" charge is
unmistakably what hindered the proper prosecution of the rape gangs, and
hinders it still. The perpetrators are untouchable because the British
authorities have yet to tackle, and may never tackle, what really makes
them untouchable: the prevailing culture -- not just in Britain, but in
the U.S. also, and all over the West -- that consigns all concerns about
the activity of Muslims, whether it be jihad terror or Sharia- and
Qur'an-inspired sex trafficking, as here, to "racism" and
"Islamophobia." The officials who swept these cases under the rug were
terrified of being called "bigots" by the likes of Nick Lowles of the
Leftist organization Hope Not Hate, which acts determinedly to smear and
marginalize anyone who dares raise a voice against large-scale Muslim
criminality and the Islamization of Britain; and Fiyaz Mughal of
TellMamaUK, an organization dedicated to combating "Islamophobia" in
Britain -- by which it means even the smallest, weakest opposition to
jihad terror and Islamic supremacism.
People like Lowles and
Mughal have real power in David Cameron's shattered, staggering,
terrified, dhimmi Britain. The members of the Rotherham Council may
quite reasonably have thought that if they revealed the full magnitude
of Muslim rape gang activity, and prosecuted the offenders
energetically, they would be accused of exaggerating the problem, or
even of fabricating it altogether, out of a deep-seated "racism" and
"Islamophobia." They could consequently have lost their jobs and never
gotten another one. So they kept quiet. And the victim tally grew ever
higher.
As Britain races to ruin, these officials can console
themselves that even as thousands of girls' lives were ruined on their
watch, and the world was treated to the spectacle of a free nation
submitting meekly to barbaric activity on a shocking scale, at least
they were never, ever "racist."
Friday, February 6, 2015
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