This week has seen the publication of the most important document to be released by the British Parliament this decade. It is the The Rape Gang Inquiry Report, which documents how at least 250,000 British girls were raped, tortured, abused, forced into marriage, shipped overseas and more, by muslim immigrant men, primarily Pakistani. The Inquiry was chaired by Rupert Lowe MP and drew on the expertise of experienced professionals. It documents the harrowing stories of the girls and also the crass and frankly criminal behaviour of police, the judiciary, social workers, journalists, politicians and others. I am still reading it; it is sickening.
I note that the usual suspects, the ‘independent fact checkers’ have already made an appearance on social media. We know what they are, government stooges called in for damage control. We can take their claims in that light.
I can say that I have been aware of this problem since 1998. At that time I was a freelance photojournalist in Scotland. Then there were over 130 local newspapers in Scotland and I took about thirty every week, since I often found good human interest stories in them. One of the Glasgow local papers carried a story, perhaps three paragraphs long, about ‘young Asian men cruising in cars seeking to pick up white girls.’ I should mention that in the early 1970s the British Press Council had issued an advisory that Pakistanis were not to be referred to as such, but as ‘Asians’, much to the annoyance of the other Asians.

I thought that I had the makings of a story so I took a trip to Glasgow. I spoke to the press liaison officer at Strathclyde Police, as it was then, as any professional would and was given the brush-off. I then tried to speak to the journalist who had written the story, to find him ‘unobtainable.’ While touring the referenced neighbourhood, a middle-class area in the South Side, I received a call from a senior Strathclyde Police officer warning me that I had been reported for ‘suspicious behaviour’ and was told that if I ‘did not desist I would be arrested.’ Basically, get out of town. I took the story to several newspapers, all much bigger than the one it had first appeared in, but was told they would not run it; one good friend told me that if I didn’t back off I would ‘never work again.’
It was clear that these journalists had been ‘spoken to’ as I had, but I had no way to pursue the story, so I left it and travelled home. I had a young family to support and no desire to see my livelihood compromised or for that matter to spend time in jail on one of the jumped-up charges that Strathclyde Police were notorious for, back then. I had no idea how big the story actually was or that I was seeing the tip of the iceberg; these were organised muslim rape gangs at work, operating across the UK and harming literally hundreds of thousands of vulnerable girls. The Rape Gang Inquiry Report, published this week, supports that.
The British Government is completely corrupt and having called in the ‘fact checkers’ already, their next step will likely be to suppress the Report. I encourage everyone to download and share it as widely as possible.


