
This is a preview of Migration Watch’s free weekly newsletter. Please consider signing up to the newsletter directly, you can do so here and will receive an email copy of the newsletter every week as soon as it is released.
This week has been dominated by the explosive Casey Report – an investigation into historic (and ongoing) group based child sexual exploitation, committed by predominantly Pakistani heritage gangs against predominantly White British girls as young as 10 years of age. This abuse was subsequently ignored or concealed by officials, including local police, social workers, and councillors.
Many excellent journalists have written full summaries of the Report, such as Sam Ashworth-Hayes in the Telegraph. However, at Migration Watch, we want to bring your attention to the Report’s conclusions on asylum and immigration.
Baroness Casey writes:
“During the course of this audit, we saw evidence of around a dozen live, complex, group-based child sexual exploitation police operations, the full details of which cannot be included in this report so as not to prejudice any future criminal justice outcomes. While the future outcomes of these investigations remain unknown, and the number of live, open cases we had access to was limited, this audit noted that a significant proportion of these cases appear to involve suspects who are non-UK nationals and/or who are claiming asylum in the UK. A number of live operations, including some of those reported to us by the Metropolitan Police Service, report an overlap between child sexual exploitation and child criminal exploitation.”
She went on to state:
“The review into child sexual exploitation in Newcastle… recognised the lack of research which had been undertaken into any potential cultural drivers of offending. It took an unusual step to try and understand this as far as possible by interviewing one of the offenders who had claimed asylum in the UK. In the interview, the offender spoke in a derogatory way about lack of morals in British girls and the ease with which he was able to access sex, drugs and alcohol.”
As we have warned, there is an inextricable link between Britain’s ongoing demographic transformation and horrendous misogynistic crimes such as the grooming gangs. New arrivals to Britain often add to those already here from cultures which do not share our attitudes towards women or vulnerable children. And when they arrive, they do not feel the need or desire to integrate; they simply enter parallel, “multicultural” communities which resemble the very countries they hail from.
We now how have what all but amounts to a de facto open border with the entire world through our porous border at the English Channel, a lax asylum system, activist lawyers, open-border charities and indulgent immigration judges. We have admitted into Britain tens of thousands of unvetted, young men from cultures where misogyny is the norm. This has come at a horrendous human cost: uncountable numbers of young girls raped, assaulted and abused in the most, unimaginably sadistic and depraved ways. Many of these children, now adults, will never see justice.
Dogged campaigning by journalists like Andrew Norfolk and Charlie Peters, and now the fearless Baroness Louise Casey through her harrowing report, have finally forced the government into a position where they must accept the imperative for a national, judge-led, statutory inquiry. We applaud Baroness Casey for her bravery in speaking truth to power. So many of us outside government have been calling for such an inquiry for years. It’s critical now that the inquiry be given full statutory powers and a far-reaching remit to get to the bottom of the rape-gangs scandal.
It is time we knew how groups of disproportionately Pakistani Muslim men were able to get away with grooming, abusing and raping vulnerable white British girls. Children that, in the words of a former Labour Home Secretary, these vile men regarded as ‘easy meat’. How many were asylum seekers, who arrived illegally, and where were they from? These are questions to which the victims and the public deserve answers. We pray the inquiry can deliver them.
This is a preview of Migration Watch’s free weekly newsletter. Please consider signing up to the newsletter directly, you can do so here and will receive an email copy of the newsletter every week as soon as it is released.