British Police Silence Young Women Trying to Report Minority Rapists and Ethnic Trafficking Rings


An English woman spoke with Katie Hopkins about surviving a child exploitation ring in Rotherham. She told Hopkins about the terrifying situation she found herself in even after escaping the child exploitation ring. The authorities threatened her against ever disclosing the ethnicity of her attackers, instead of following the law and bringing the perpetrators to justice.

She told Katie: “I actually reported by abuse 14 years ago. I went to the authorities, my parents did. I sat and gave video interviews with the police, I was willing to work with them.

“I never once looked at my perpetrators for what race or religion they were. I simply looked at who they were and what they’d done.

“But as soon as I said the names, I was made to feel as though I was racist and I was the one who had the problem.

“That continued all the way through to the Jay Report coming out in Rotherham.

“I knew I wasn’t racist, but that was used as a way to silence me.”

She ended up having to move out of the country to stay safe from reprisals within the community.

Emma’s story is not the only heartbreaking account of police injustice and failure to protect abused woman. After police finally started investigating these allegations between 1999 and 2001, 18 people were arrested and sentenced for committing child sex offenses, with combined sentences exceeding 280 years. An accompanying report disclosed that a total of 1,400 children were sexually abused in Rotherham over a period 16 years and that the authorities were reluctant to act or prosecute over fears they’re be deemed racist.

However, these arrests were just a token gesture that barely even addressed the severity of the human trafficking and child exploitation rings in Rotherham.

In September 2012, Andrew Norfolk, a journalist on The Times newspaper, published an investigation which revealed a confidential 2010 police report had warned thousands of such crimes were still being committed in South Yorkshire each year by networks of Asian men.

“In the other cases, overwhelmingly, they were men of Pakistani origin and we need to understand why this has been happening,” said Mr Norfolk.

He described a previous report into gang exploitation as a “missed opportunity” because of its failure to look at the proportion of men of Pakistani origin committing such offences.

Yet, despite the concerns, in 2012 no further prosecutions for child sex exploitation took place in Rotherham.

Former Labour MP, Denis Macshane, vehemently states that the police kept their knowledge of these crimes hidden from politicians.

“But it is clear the internal trafficking of barely pubescent girls is much more widespread.”

Liberal logic is quite tricky to decipher. How did Macshane both not have any knowledge of the police being instructed to racially profile against whites but also that trafficking barely pubescent girls were widespread in his district?

Continue reading on the next page to find out about the larger criminal conspiracy at work behind these child exploration rings

Next Page »



Share

8 Comments

  1. Hannah Curtiss

Leave a Reply

Pin It on Pinterest