The decision of the Minister of State for “Protection” and Combating Violence against Women and Girls” Jess Phillips last October to block a public inquiry into Muslim gangs raping underage girls seems and is almost inexplicable and the whole case has developed into an unprecedented scandal in Britain.
Thousands of underage girls were brutally raped and abused by Muslim gangs, mainly of Pakistani origin, while the authorities failed to protect them.
The case was brought back to light by Elon Musk, who, with his continuous posts, accused the British government of Keir Starmer of jailing Britons for a post they made online, while letting rapists of minors go free.
The issue is that there is solid evidence of a cover-up of these crimes by Keir Starmer himself when he was serving as a public servant!
One of the areas where these heinous crimes took place was Oldham, according to an investigation published in 2022, but this had focused on rapes that took place only from 2011 to 2014.
The victims themselves and their families said they wanted a new government-led investigation to cover a longer period and collect new evidence that was not included in the previous report.
However, in her letter to Oldham City Council, revealed by GB News, Jess Phillips said that while she understood the common feeling of the city’s residents, she believed it was better to carry out another investigation at a local level only.

The scandal must be completely uprooted and investigated by the full force of the British state.
Voices ranging from Elon Musk to the new leader of the Conservative Party, Kim Badenoch, and Neil Farage have stepped up efforts for a new investigation, but the Starmer government categorically refuses to hold one.
This refusal is not new
In a country where state institutions have as their main priority the protection of the most vulnerable members of British society, the authorities are deliberately turning a blind eye to the horrific abuse of white children by gangs of men mainly of Pakistani origin.
Over time, details of the abuse in Oldham, Rotherham, Telford and dozens of other places have come to light.

The horrific details reported by some British media outlets cannot be captured here.
However, we will only mention a few of these cases, not only of the rapes, but also of the climate of terror that the victims’ families themselves later experienced.
What the 2013 indictment against Mohammed Karrar in Oxford states.
“Mohammed prepared his victim “for gang-rape anal using (…). He subjected the underage girl to gang rape by five or six men. (…) A red ball was placed in her mouth to keep her quiet.”
Her story is horrific. It is also far from unique.
In Telford, Lucy Lowe was murdered at the age of 16 along with her mother and sister when her rapist set fire to her home. She had given birth to Azhar Ali Mahmud’s child when she was just 14 and was pregnant when she was killed.
Her death was then used to threaten other children. The investigation in Telford uncovered other threats. When another victim, aged 12, told her mother about her rape, her mother called the police.
The victim now recounts what happened next:
“There were about six or seven Asians who came to my house. They threatened my mum saying they were going to burn us in my house with a Molotov cocktail if we didn’t drop the charges.”
However, in a pattern that would be repeated in dozens of cases, the Telford authorities looked elsewhere. When the independent investigation was finally published in 2022, it found that police officers described parts of the city as “no-go areas”, while witnesses spoke of police corruption and favouritism towards the Pakistani community!
Regardless of the reason, the investigation found that “there was a nervousness about the specific race… amounting to a reluctance to investigate crimes committed by what is generally described as the “Asian” community”, to soften the impression
Similar behavior was seen in Oldham local council where concerns about not appearing “racist” led police officers to downplay the incident simply because the perpetrators were “Asian”, i.e. mainly Pakistani Muslims. It was felt that some suspects were not investigated because it would be “politically incorrect”.
Above all, there was concern about the relationship with the Pakistani “community” and how it would react:
senior council officials were terrified that child abuse “had the potential to start a ‘race riot’”. The result was stagnation, despite officials acknowledging in at least one case that abuse by Asians had been going on for “years and years”.
It is estimated that between 1,000 and 1,400 underage girls were abused in Rotherham alone between 1980 and 2009. However, even this conservative estimate has been challenged by official figures, with police insisting in 2018 that the number was “excessive”.
An independent inquiry later found this figure entirely justified.
A culture of cover-up
Denial of the extent of the problem is deeply rooted in Britain’s political system. At times, it seems that the country’s governments’ approach to “multiculturalism” was not about upholding the law, but rather about minimising the risks of unrest between “communities”.
Faced with mainly Pakistani gangs targeting mainly white children, the state knew exactly what to do. For the sake of inter-communal relations, it had to bury the story! And it did.
In Rotherham, a senior police officer brazenly told a victim’s father that there would be riots in the town if the rapes of children by Pakistanis were made public.
There are other gruesome details, and how the police themselves were involved in the scandal.
A parent worried about his missing daughter was told by the authorities that it was nothing serious, while her “relationship” with her Pakistani “boyfriend” was almost an example for girls her age!
When the girl was finally found, she had been raped multiple times and had to undergo surgery. In fact, a police officer told the same father that she had now “learned her lesson”.
This is not just a horrific story, but something more that words are too poor to describe the decline of society.
As the Rotherham investigation found, children were “doused in petrol and threatened with being set on fire”, others were “threatened with guns”, and “witnessed brutal rapes and were threatened that they would be the next victim if they told anyone. Girls as young as 11 were raped by large numbers of male perpetrators, one after the other.”
In the same city, a senior police officer reportedly said that the abuse had “been going on” for 30 years, but added, “as they are Asian, we cannot afford for this to come out.”
This is the “kingdom of evil”, in the truest sense of the word.
As a 2015 investigation into Rotherham Council found, this attitude was widespread. The Pakistani community represented around 3% of the town’s population, and the story that emerged was clear: Pakistani men were raping white girls. As a result, said one witness, the council was “terrified by the impact that going public would have on social cohesion”.
Across the town, there was unprecedented pressure on parents to “suppress, silence or cover up” issues of child abuse. A former senior officer said that “so-and-so (an official) didn’t want the town to become the child abuse capital of the North. They didn’t want riots”.
This nervousness stemmed from the fact that Pakistanis enjoyed “disproportionate influence” on the council: as one witness noted:
“my experience of the council as it was and still is – Asians are very powerful and white British people are very aware of racism and are afraid of allegations of racism, so there is no serious challenge for Pakistanis.”
In 2016, it was reported that a rape victim in Rotherham had alleged that she had been raped by a councillor.
As a result, the council went to great lengths to “cover up the information and silence the complainants.” In the words of witnesses, “if you want to keep your job, you keep your head down and your mouth shut.”
The state protects rapists and arrests parents
While fears of racial tensions and the “political correctness” of stupidity have often left the British state reluctant to protect victims, the same concerns protect attackers.
In at least two cases, the investigation found, parents tracked down their daughters and tried to remove them from the homes where they were being abused.
In other cases, child victims were arrested for “drunkenness and disorderly conduct,” rather than the adult men they were with.
The protection of offenders may have gone even further. In at least one case, when a victim found the courage to go to the police, the perpetrator was informed. While still at the police station, the child received a text message from her abuser informing her that he had her 11-year-old sister and that it was now “your choice…” The child chose not to press charges.
These stories cover only a small number of towns. The bigger picture, however, is clear. The consequences are also clear: no police officer or civil servant has ever been imprisoned. Indeed, in Rotherham, the harshest sanctions faced by police were written… warnings.
Even rapists have managed to avoid some of the consequences for their actions. Although some have had their British citizenship revoked, a Rochdale gang leader continues to live among his victims, despite being ordered to be deported.
The current British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who held the position of Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) from 2008 to 2013, was one of the politicians who concealed and buried the cases of mass rape.
In 2010, in particular, the police had drawn up a report in which he named Pakistanis who approached minors even outside schools. Starmer, from the position he held and despite the detailed reports that would have saved hundreds of girls’ lives, and the police leadership made the decision to keep the report secret so as not to trigger “racist conflicts” within the community.
The corruption does not stop there. It extends everywhere, even to the judiciary.
Judge Guy Kerl sentenced activist Tommy Robinson to 20 months in prison for a simple sentence that revealed the truth:
“All the money goes to the immigrants who rape our children and instead get priority everywhere.”
The judge described this sentence as a very serious “offense” when sentencing Robinson.

According to Malcolm Pearson, former leader of the UKIP party and now an independent MP in the House of Lords, over 250,000 children have been raped by Muslims in Britain over the past 25 years. It seems the horror has no limits or end.
In this climate, Elon Musk has launched a campaign to expose this unprecedented case, and the only thing that interests the political establishment in Britain is that it is attempting political intervention, indifferent to the hundreds of thousands of victims of the rape of underage girls by Muslims in Britain.
Such a decline, such a magnitude of corruption has never existed. The current British Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, when he stated that there is a serious problem of “Islamophobia” in his country.




