Grooming Gangs: Racially and religiously aggravated crimes

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Dr. Ella Hill appeared on TRIGGERnometry in 2020 to share her harrowing experience of abuse at the hands of her attacker and the shocking apathy she encountered from the police when she sought their help. The very institutions tasked with protecting vulnerable young women like her showed a complete lack of interest.

While mainstream media did cover the story, it was investigative journalist Andrew Norfolk of The Times who first brought it to the public’s attention. Documentaries, television programs, and newspaper articles have since shed light on the issue; the attention given to these horrific crimes, however, was grossly inadequate.

What occurred – systematic gang rape of women and children on a massive scale – was so appalling that it warranted daily, relentless media coverage. And yet, the story was treated as a footnote.

Why?

Not only were these acts of sexual violence heinous; they were also racially motivated. According to Ella, the perpetrators targeted white victims specifically; they used slurs like “white whores” and “white slags.” The authorities, however, failed to classify these as racially aggravated crimes or to acknowledge the perpetrators as racists.

Instead, the victims were further humiliated, dismissed, and even labelled as “Paki shaggers” by the very institutions meant to protect them. This response stemmed from a toxic combination of incompetence, indifference, and fear of addressing issues of race.

At the height of a global obsession with so-called “hate crime epidemics,” where people were investigated for offensive language, the police, social services, and other officials turned a blind eye to the suffering of young women; they were targeted specifically because of their race.

This story deserved widespread, unrelenting media attention until the government was forced to act decisively; this would include investigating, prosecuting, convicting, and deporting the perpetrators, while offering comprehensive support to the victims.

Imagine the outrage if the roles were reversed. Picture a scenario where hundreds of white men systematically targeted Muslim girls for rape and torture. What would the reaction be if a father trying to save his daughter from these attackers was arrested while the perpetrators went free? Or if we learned that tens of thousands of victims had been ignored by authorities? In a country that dedicated a full week of media coverage to a royal incident involving a white woman questioning a black woman’s heritage, the hypocrisy is glaring.

Had the victims been from minority communities, the media would have erupted. Accusations of “far-right extremism,” “Islamophobia,” and “racism” would have dominated the news cycle for months.

There would have been inquiries, apologies, press conferences, and sweeping reforms; when it came to grooming gangs, however, there was only silence — until now.

Earlier today, Labour’s Yvette Cooper reversed her party’s position under mounting pressure from new media voices; she announced a series of measures, including further inquiries into the issue, marking a significant shift in the conversation. Amplified by Elon Musk’s reach on X, public calls for justice grew too loud to ignore; suddenly, the efforts of those who had been raising alarm bells for years in obscurity are being acknowledged.

However, Starmer’s government continues to incarcerate the loudest and most truthful voice that has been exposing the Muslim grooming gangs for years, Tommy Robinson. It appears from the treatment Tommy is being subjected to that the Starmer government is the most racist and malevolent the once-great nation of Britain has ever seen.

Starmer is a disgrace!

While skepticism about government-led inquiries is understandable, these developments represent a step in the right direction. The establishment’s ability to suppress stories is diminishing; the voices of individuals are growing stronger. With this shift, survivors like Ella may finally see justice; the perpetrators — as well as those who enabled them — could face the overdue consequences of their actions.

Tommy Robinson: An English Martyr

For over two decades, Tommy Robinson — whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon — has been relentless in his mission to alert the British public and government to the vile Pakistani grooming gangs that have raped and exploited thousands of young English girls and boys with apparent impunity.

Since founding the English Defence League (EDL) in 2009, Robinson has organized protests and spoken out against what he sees as a systemic failure to address these crimes, often at great personal cost. His efforts began as early as 2004, well before mainstream media like The Times — through Andrew Norfolk’s 2011 exposé — brought the Rotherham scandal to light. Robinson’s documentary, The Rape of Britain: Survivor Stories, released in January 2022, detailed survivor accounts from Telford, amplifying voices long ignored by authorities.

Yet, the UK government’s response has been to silence him rather than heed his warnings; Robinson has faced multiple arrests, convictions, and prison sentences, often under contentious circumstances.

His current 18-month sentence, imposed on October 28, 2024, for contempt of court, stems from breaching an injunction by repeating false claims about a Syrian refugee, Jamal Hijazi. Posts on X claim he’s enduring harsh conditions, such as starvation and solitary confinement, though official verification is lacking — these assertions reflect a narrative of state persecution pushed by his supporters.

Previously, in 2018, he was jailed for 13 months (later reduced) for livestreaming outside Leeds Crown Court during a grooming gang trial, risking its collapse — an act his critics argue endangered justice, not advanced it.

Robinson’s crusade began in Luton, where he witnessed firsthand the grooming epidemic’s toll; he argues it’s a cultural issue tied to Muslim communities, a view that’s earned him labels of “far-right” and “Islamophobe” from the establishment and media: Abusive tactics that are often employed by the media to slander and vilify those trying to expose the government’s failures.

The 2014 Alexis Jay report on Rotherham confirmed 1,400 victims, mostly white girls, abused by predominantly Pakistani men between 1997 and 2013, noting authorities’ reluctance to act due to fears of racism accusations — a finding echoed in Oldham (2022) and Telford (2022) inquiries. Yet, while Robinson spotlighted this reality, his methods — street protests, inflammatory rhetoric, and legal breaches — have polarized opinion, with figures like Nazir Afzal crediting Starmer’s CPS reforms post-2012 for progress, not Robinson’s agitation.

Starmer, as Director of Public Prosecution from 2008-2013, oversaw a shift in CPS policy after Rochdale’s 2012 prosecution, emphasizing victim belief over credibility — a “sea change” Afzal praised.

Critics of the British government, including Elon Musk on X (January 2025), claim Starmer failed to act decisively earlier, with Musk alleging complicity “in exchange for votes” — a charge lacking evidence but fueling outrage. Starmer’s government, elected July 2024, rejected a national grooming gang inquiry in October 2024, prompting Cooper’s January 16, 2025, reversal for a “rapid national audit” under public pressure, amplified by Musk’s 211 million X followers and Robinson’s 1.2 million.

The treatment of Robinson — solitary confinement claims aside — contrasts starkly with the leniency shown to grooming gang perpetrators; many convicted remain in the UK, citing human rights, while Robinson languishes behind bars. This disparity suggests a government more intent on punishing dissent than addressing the root crimes; Labour’s hesitance to confront ethnic patterns, as Jay noted, persists despite Cooper’s shift. Robinson’s supporters see him as a martyr for truth; detractors, a menace who nearly derailed justice (e.g., Huddersfield 2018). The hypocrisy is glaring — a week of media frenzy over a royal race row in 2022, yet decades of silence on thousands of victims.

As new media voices rise and public fury mounts, Starmer’s administration faces a reckoning; the question remains whether this is justice delayed or democracy betrayed.


Why are the English police not protecting innocent young British girls and boys from the Paki rape gangs?


Editor’s Note: If you can’t handle being called a Paki, you should stop raping women and go back to where you came from. You are not welcome in civilized countries. Nor will this site ever be afraid of using hurty words. The truth is the truth.

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