250,000 White British Girls Raped by Muslim Immigrant Gangs, The Rape Gang Inquiry Report Britain Tried to Bury

The Rape Gangs of Britain: The Sickening Horror of Muslim Immigrant Atrocities and the Unconscionable Media Burial of Truth

The Rape Gang Inquiry Report, a 219-page independent document released in mid-June 2026 by figures including MP Rupert Lowe, exposes one of the darkest and most depraved chapters in modern British history. It estimates that at least 250,000 young white British girls have been groomed, raped, trafficked, tortured, and systematically abused by organized gangs across at least 149 towns, cities, and districts since the 1950s.

This is not a story of isolated incidents or ordinary crime. This is industrialized child sexual exploitation on a scale that defies belief, carried out predominantly by Muslim men of Pakistani immigrant heritage and, in other cases, men from Somali, Syrian, Turkish, Iranian, and other Muslim backgrounds. The report describes a clear ethnoreligious pattern. Conviction data analyzed in the report and prior studies shows 84 percent or more of group-based offenders as South Asian, with the vast majority Pakistani Muslim. In many prosecutions involving larger gangs, every single perpetrator shared Muslim names and backgrounds.

The horror is sickening. It is horrific. It is an insanity born of mass immigration from cultures that treat non-Muslim girls as fair game, combined with a British establishment that chose political correctness, community relations, and fear of racism labels over the protection of its own children.

The Mechanics of the Depravity

The process followed a sickeningly consistent pattern in town after town. Vulnerable girls, often as young as 11 or 12, many already failed by the care system or living in chaotic homes, were targeted in schools, on streets, or near takeaways and taxi ranks. Older men, frequently taxi drivers or fast-food workers, offered friendship, cigarettes, alcohol, or lifts. They groomed the girls with gifts and attention that lonely children craved.

Once hooked, the girls were introduced to “parties” or houses where alcohol and drugs flowed freely. What followed was gang rape. Groups of men, sometimes five, ten, or twenty strong, would take turns violating the same child for hours. Girls were passed around like objects between networks of men in the same town or trafficked to other cities for further abuse. Resistance brought beatings, burning with cigarettes, threats with knives, or warnings that sisters and mothers would be next.

Some girls endured years of this. They were drugged into compliance, blackmailed with photographs or videos, or hooked on heroin and crack supplied by the same gangs. Pregnant victims faced forced abortions or secret births. Some were held captive for weeks or months, used as sex slaves and shared among dozens or even hundreds of men over time. Survivor accounts compiled in inquiries and this new report describe rapes with broken bottles and other objects, simultaneous violations, and sadistic humiliations that left permanent physical and psychological scars.

This was not opportunistic crime by lone predators. These were organized networks operating with near impunity for years. The men often knew each other through family, clan, or mosque connections. Loyalty to the group and to their communities trumped any sense of British law or basic humanity.

The Scale Across Britain

The report traces cases back to Bradford in 1955. The phenomenon exploded with accelerating immigration from Pakistan and other Muslim-majority countries from the 1960s onward, chain migration, and the growth of parallel communities that resisted integration.

Major scandals erupted in Rotherham, where at least 1,400 girls were abused between 1997 and 2013, overwhelmingly by Pakistani Muslim men. In Rochdale, similar networks operated for years. Telford saw estimates of up to 1,000 victims. Oxford, Oldham, Huddersfield, Bradford, Newcastle, Bristol, and many others followed the same template. The new inquiry maps the abuse to 149 separate local authority areas.

In each place the story repeated with local variations in scale but identical depravity. Taxi drivers used their vehicles and knowledge of the town to ferry girls between abusers. Takeaway shops served as bases. Girls were collected from children’s homes or outside schools. The abuse continued because authorities looked the other way.

Who Carried Out These Atrocities

The perpetrators were not a random cross-section of society. Data from convictions between 2005 and 2017 showed 84 percent South Asian, predominantly Pakistani Muslim. Other analyses of group-based cases found 87 percent of convicted men had traditional Muslim names. Larger gangs were almost entirely Pakistani Muslim in composition. Smaller groups sometimes included men from other Muslim immigrant backgrounds. White British men were significantly underrepresented relative to population share.

This is an ethnoreligious phenomenon. Cultural and religious attitudes imported from parts of Pakistan and the wider Muslim world played a central role. In those environments, non-Muslim girls, especially those without male protection or from lower-status backgrounds, were often viewed as inferior or “easy meat.” Veiled or Muslim girls were generally off-limits within the same communities. White British girls from working-class or care backgrounds were targeted precisely because they were seen as outside the protective circle of family honor and community.

The report and prior evidence show that clan structures, biraderi networks, and in some cases religious justifications or community silence enabled the abuse and shielded perpetrators. Integration failed on a massive scale. Parallel societies developed where British law was secondary to imported norms. Mass immigration without assimilation demands created the conditions for this horror to flourish.

The Victims: Britain’s Betrayed Children

The victims were overwhelmingly young white British girls from working-class backgrounds. Many were already in the care system or known to social services. They were the most vulnerable in society, and the state that was supposed to protect them abandoned them to packs of predators.

These girls suffered repeated rapes, often dozens or hundreds of times. They developed severe PTSD, addiction, self-harm, and suicidal ideation. Many lost years of education and any chance of normal adulthood. Families that tried to intervene had their homes attacked or received death threats. Some victims later took their own lives. The human wreckage stretches across decades and generations.

Institutional Failure and the PC Insanity

The most sickening aspect may be the cover-up by British institutions. Police forces in affected areas received intelligence and victim reports for years yet failed to act decisively. Officers were sometimes told explicitly to back off to avoid antagonizing Muslim communities or being labeled racist. Social services and local councils suppressed reports or reclassified child rape as “prostitution” or “lifestyle choices.” Some politicians and officials prioritized “community cohesion” over child safety.

In Rotherham, multiple inquiries documented how evidence was ignored and whistleblowers sidelined. Similar patterns emerged in Rochdale and elsewhere. The fear of racism accusations created a paralysis that cost thousands of children their innocence and, in some cases, their lives. Multicultural dogma and mass immigration policies blinded authorities to the obvious pattern staring them in the face.

The UK Media’s Unconscionable Role

If the institutional failures were bad, the media’s behavior has been unconscionable. For years, mainstream outlets used euphemisms like “Asian men” while knowing the perpetrators were overwhelmingly Pakistani Muslim. They downplayed or ignored the ethnic and religious dimension. High-profile convictions received limited follow-up. The broader pattern across dozens of towns was treated as a series of local stories rather than a national scandal demanding urgent scrutiny.

Now, with the release of this comprehensive Rape Gang Inquiry Report documenting 250,000 victims and detailing the cover-up, much of the legacy media has chosen to bury it. Coverage is minimal, often framed through the lens of “controversy” or attacks on those highlighting the findings rather than the horror itself. Some outlets mischaracterize the report or pivot immediately to “not all Muslims” disclaimers while ignoring the documented overrepresentation and the victims’ suffering.

This is not journalism. This is complicity. By suppressing or softening the truth about Muslim immigrant grooming gangs, the media protected perpetrators, shielded failed policies, and re-victimized survivors who have waited decades for accountability. It is a profound moral failure that compounds the original betrayal by police, councils, and politicians.

The Human and Societal Cost

Two hundred and fifty thousand girls represent an almost unimaginable toll. Each one had a name, a family, dreams that were shattered. The trauma ripples outward to parents, siblings, and future relationships. Entire communities in northern towns and beyond carry collective scars. Trust in the police, social services, and political class has eroded, perhaps permanently in some places.

The insanity lies in the refusal to confront root causes. Mass immigration from cultures with fundamentally different views on women, consent, integration, and the status of non-believers created the conditions. Political correctness and elite disdain for native working-class concerns prevented honest discussion. The result was industrial-scale rape of British children on British soil.

What Must Happen Now

The Rape Gang Inquiry Report demands action, not more inquiries that water down findings. Full accountability requires naming those in positions of power who enabled or covered up the abuse. Convicted perpetrators who are not British citizens must face deportation. Foreign-born enablers and those who intimidated witnesses should be removed. A honest national conversation about the compatibility of large-scale Muslim immigration with British values is long overdue.

Britain must end the policies that imported these problems at scale. Stricter controls on immigration from regions with poor integration records, genuine assimilation requirements, and an end to the multiculturalism experiment that prioritized diversity over cohesion are essential. Cultural attitudes that treat non-Muslim girls as prey must be confronted without apology.

The sickening truth is that for decades the British state and much of its media valued the sensibilities of immigrant communities more than the safety of native children. That hierarchy of concern produced 250,000 victims and counting. It is horrific. It is indefensible. It must never happen again.

The report exists. The evidence is compiled. The pattern is undeniable. The only remaining question is whether Britain will finally summon the courage to face what mass Muslim immigration and political correctness have wrought, or whether the media burial and institutional denial will continue until even more children are destroyed.

Justice for the victims begins with telling the truth without euphemism or fear. The Rape Gang Inquiry Report does exactly that. The rest of us must refuse to look away.

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