July 13, 2013  
Britain's "Rape Jihad" Crisis
By _Soeren  Kern_ (http://www.realclearworld.com/authors/soeren_kern/) 
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A court in London has sentenced seven members of a Muslim child grooming 
gang  based in Oxford to at least 95 years in prison for raping, torturing and 
 trafficking British girls as young as 11. 
The high-profile trial was the latest in a rapidly growing list of grooming 
 cases that are forcing politically correct Britons to confront the 
previously  taboo subject of endemic sexual abuse of children by predatory 
Muslim 
paedophile  gangs. 
The 18-week trial drew unwelcome attention to the sordid reality that 
police,  social workers, teachers, neighbors, politicians and the media have 
for 
decades  downplayed the severity of the crimes perpetrated against British 
children  because they were afraid of being accused of "Islamophobia" or 
racism. 
According to government estimates that are believed to be "just the tip of  
the iceberg," at least 2,500 British children have so far been confirmed to 
be  victims of grooming gangs, and another 20,000 children are at risk of 
sexual  exploitation. At least 27 police forces are currently investigating 
54 alleged  child grooming gangs across England and Wales. 

Judge Peter Rook, who presided over the trial that ended on June 27 at the  
Central Criminal Court of England and Wales (aka the Old Bailey), sentenced 
five  of the men to life in prison and ordered them to serve a minimum of 
between 12  and 20 years before becoming eligible for parole. 
Rook said the severity of the jail terms -- which are longer than those in  
other high-profile grooming cases such as those in Rochdale, Derby and 
Telford  -- were meant to send a message to abusers that they would be targeted 
and  brought to justice. 
After reading the sentence, Rook said the men -- who are from Pakistan and  
Eritrea -- had committed "a series of sexual crimes of the utmost 
depravity" and  had targeted "young girls because they were vulnerable, 
underage and 
out of  control." 
The ringleaders of the gang, brothers Akhtar Dogar, 32, and Anjum Dogar, 
31,  were given life sentences and were told by the judge that they had been 
found  guilty of "exceptionally grave crimes." They are to remain in prison 
for a  minimum of 17 years before becoming eligible for parole. 
A second pair of brothers, Bassam Karrar, 33, and Mohammed Karrar, 38, were 
 also given life sentences. Mohammed Karrar was given a minimum sentence of 
20  years for the "dreadful offenses" he committed against the girls, 
including one  child whom he branded with the letter "M" for Mohammed. He began 
pimping the  girl when she was only 11, and forced her to have a backstreet 
abortion when she  was 12. 
In graphic testimony, one of the victims told the court that Mohammed 
Karrar  would charge men £500 ($750) to have sex with her. They would take her 
to 
homes  in High Wycombe where she would be subjected to gang rapes, 
incidents that she  described as "torture sex." The men would tie her up and 
gag her 
mouth with a  ball to stop her cries from being heard. The men would play 
out abuse fantasies;  sometimes she was left bleeding for days afterwards. 
In one of her few acts of defiance, she threatened Mohammed Karrar with his 
 own lock knife as he was preparing to rape her; he knocked her out with a 
metal  baseball bat. 
Mohammed's younger brother, Bassam Karrar, who was found guilty of brutally 
 raping and attacking a 14-year-old girl while he was high on cocaine, was  
ordered to serve a minimum of 15 years. 
Kamar Jamil, 27, was jailed for life with a minimum term of 12 years. Assad 
 Hussain, 32, and Zeeshan Ahmed, 28, were both jailed for seven years. 
The six victims who gave evidence were aged between 11 and 15 when the 
abuse  took place. They were plied with drugs and alcohol, repeatedly raped, 
sold and  trafficked as prostitutes, all at a time during which when they were 
supposedly  in the safekeeping of local authorities. 
The trial -- details of which were so disturbing that jury members were  
excused from ever having to sit on a jury again -- exposed years of failings 
by  Thames Valley police and Oxford social services. The court heard that the 
girls  were abused between 2004 and 2012 and that police were told about 
the crimes as  early as 2006, that they were contacted at least six times by 
victims, but  failed to act. 
The mother of Girl "A" said the police and social services had failed to  
protect the girls and made her and other family members feel as if they were  
overreacting. She said: "I can recall countless incidents when I have been 
upset  and frustrated by various professional bodies." 
The mother of Girl "C" told the British newspaper The Guardian that she had 
 begged social services staff to rescue her daughter from the rape gang. 
She said  that her daughter's abusers had threatened to cut the girl's face 
off and  promised to slit the throats of her family members. She said that 
they had been  forced to leave their home after the men had threatened to 
decapitate family  members. 
Despite irrefutable evidence that the girls were being sexually abused, no  
one -- according to a report published by the House of Commons on June 5 -- 
 acted to draw all the facts together, apparently due to fears by police 
and  social workers that they would be accused of racism against Muslims. 
The report, "Child Sexual Exploitation and the Response to Localized  
Grooming," states: "Evidence presented to us suggests that there is a model of  
localized grooming of Pakistani-heritage men targeting young White girls. 
This  must be acknowledged by official agencies, who we were concerned to hear 
in some  areas of particular community tension, had reportedly been slow to 
draw  attention to the issue for fear of affecting community cohesion. The  
condemnation from those communities of this vile crime should demonstrate 
that  there is no excuse for tip-toeing around this issue. It is important 
that  police, social workers and others be able to raise their concerns freely, 
 without fear of being labelled racist." 
These allegations have been confirmed by the imam of the Oxford Islamic  
Congregation, Taj Hargey, who says race and religion are inextricably linked 
to  the spate of grooming rings in which Muslim men are targeting under-age 
white  girls. 
Writing in the Daily Mail on May 15, Hargey states: "Apart from its sheer  
depravity, what also depresses me about this case is the widespread refusal 
to  face up to its hard realities. The fact is that the vicious activities 
of the  Oxford ring are bound up with religion and race: religion, because 
all the  perpetrators, though they had different nationalities, were Muslim; 
and race,  because they deliberately targeted vulnerable white girls, whom 
they appeared to  regard as 'easy meat', to use one of their revealing, racist 
phrases." 
"But as so often in fearful, politically correct modern Britain," Hargey  
continues, "there is a craven unwillingness to face up to this reality.  
Commentators and politicians tip-toe around it, hiding behind weasel words. ... 
 
Part of the reason this scandal happened at all is precisely because of 
such  politically correct thinking. All the agencies of the state, including 
the  police, the social services and the care system, seemed eager to ignore 
the  sickening exploitation that was happening before their eyes. Terrified 
of  accusations of racism, desperate not to undermine the official creed of 
cultural  diversity, they took no action against obvious abuse." 
According to Hargey, "Another sign of the cowardly approach to these 
horrors  is the constant reference to the criminals as 'Asians' rather than as 
'Muslims.'  In this context, Asian is a completely meaningless term. The men 
were not from  China, or India or Sri Lanka or even Bangladesh. They were all 
from either  Pakistan or Eritrea, which is, in fact, in East Africa rather 
than Asia." 
He also says the grooming rings in Britain are actually being promoted by  
imams who encourage followers to believe that white women deserve to be  
"punished." He writes that Muslims in Britain "have been drip-fed for years  
[with] a far less uplifting doctrine, one that denigrates all women, but 
treats  whites with particular contempt. In the misguided orthodoxy that now 
prevails in  many mosques, including several of those in Oxford, men are 
unfortunately taught  that women are second-class citizens, little more than 
chattels or possessions  over whom they have absolute authority." 
Hargey points to a telling incident in the trial when it was revealed that  
Mohammed Karrar branded one of the girls with an "M," as if she were a cow. 
He  writes, "'Now, if you have sex with someone else, he'll know that you 
belong to  me,' said this criminal, highlighting an attitude where women are 
seen as  nothing more than personal property. The view of some Islamic 
preachers towards  white women can be appalling. They encourage their followers 
to believe that  these women are habitually promiscuous, decadent and sleazy 
-- sins which are  made all the worse by the fact that they are kaffurs or 
non-believers. Their  dress code, from mini-skirts to sleeveless tops, is 
deemed to reflect their  impure and immoral outlook. According to this 
mentality, these white women  deserve to be punished for their behavior by 
being 
exploited and degraded." 
According to the British Children's Minister, Tim Loughton, "We are only  
seeing the tip of the iceberg now. For too long it was something of a taboo  
issue in this country, little spoken about, little appreciated, little  
acknowledged or dealt with." He also said the grooming cases raise "very  
troubling questions about the attitude of the perpetrators, all but one of whom 
 
were from Pakistani backgrounds, towards white girls. Nothing is gained by  
shying away from that." 
During a recent House of Commons hearing on "Child Sexual Exploitation and  
the Response to Localized Grooming" the Deputy Children's Commissioner for  
England, Sue Berelowitz, said: "What I am uncovering is that sexual 
exploitation  of children is happening all over the country. As one police 
officer 
who was the  lead in a very big investigation in a very lovely, leafy, rural 
part of the  country said to me: 'There isn't a town, village or hamlet in 
which children are  not being sexually exploited.' The evidence that has 
come to the fore during the  course of my inquiry is that that, unfortunately, 
appears to be the case." 
Berelowitz continued: "We should start from the assumption that children 
are  being sexually exploited right the way across the country. In urban, 
rural and  metropolitan areas, I have hard evidence of children being sexually 
exploited.  That is part of what is going on in some parts of our country. It 
is very  sadistic. It is very violent. It is very  ugly."

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