🩸 The Rape Gang Inquiry
The report dropped on June 16th. 219 pages. Crowdfunded. Independent. Released by Rupert Lowe MP after what he called months and years of government inaction and establishment silence.
250,000 young girls. Targeted. Groomed. Raped. Trafficked. Across 149 local authority districts in the UK.
And the institutions meant to protect them — police, social services, schools, NHS, politicians — looked the other way.
The Numbers
250,000 young girls were groomed, raped, trafficked, and tortured.
Perpetrators followed a consistent playbook: befriend vulnerable girls as young as 11. Gifts. Drugs. Alcohol. Then group rapes. Violence. Blackmail. Forced pregnancies. Forced conversions. Trafficking.
87–95% of convicted perpetrators in group-based child sexual exploitation cases were Muslim. Predominantly Pakistani gangs, but groups from Somali, Iranian, Syrian, and Turkish origins were also involved.
As yet, no official statements of condemnation from UK Muslim representative groups. Not one.
Institutional Betrayal
This is the part that should make every Christian in this country weep with rage.
The British police have been essentially saying “I don’t think you have, mate” to hundreds of thousands of underage girls for decades.
Denied reports. Criminalized victims. Destroyed evidence. Prioritized political correctness and fear of “racism” accusations over child protection.
The people paid and sworn to protect the vulnerable systematically chose to protect their own careers instead.
David said it 3,000 years ago:
“Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and the oppressed. Rescue the weak and the needy; deliver them from the hand of the wicked.” (Psalm 82:3–4, NKJV)
The institutions of this country didn’t defend. They abandoned. They didn’t uphold. They buried. They didn’t rescue. They silenced.
Not Crimes. War.
The perpetrators operated under an honour- and shame-based clan code that treated non-Muslim girls — especially White working-class girls — as property available for sexual use.
Girls were told they were “White trash” who deserved punishment.
This was not horny men out of control. This was not cross-cultural misunderstanding around the age of consent. This was an ethnic programme of ritualized torture and subjugation. This was a targeted program of ritualized torture and subjugation as a means of ethnic domination.
These gangs are conducting war against White British people using serial child rape and torture as a form of conquest.
These are not crimes in the conventional sense. These are war crimes being conducted by one civilization against another.
Some of these English girls were sent abroad and were never recovered. English girls working as sex slaves in Pakistan or the Middle East right now.
There needs to be an international investigation.
What Would They Do?
Lord Miles, who works with Afghan men, translated parts of the report into Pashto and asked some Taliban what they would do to those rapists.
Their response: beatings, 24 hours in chains, no showers, starvation, and execution by stoning.
He said: “I don’t see why we can’t do the same at the very least.”
He’s right. The punishment of Western institutions — fines, community service, decades in comfortable prison cells — is an insult to what these girls went through.
The Tension of the Gospel
Eric Salmons, a US Reformed Baptist missionary, put it this way:
“In obedience to Christ, I spent nearly 10 years of my life learning languages and dedicated to sharing the gospel with Muslims. I also love westerners and my fellow countrymen. Reconciling these two things as a Christian means I want zero immigration from Muslim countries, I want millions of deportations, and I want our politicians to bring justice to things like ”gang rapes” in the UK or fraud in MN. We must elect the politicians who have a spine to do what is necessary. God is glorified by the Christian leaving his home to plant churches among the enemy. God is also glorified by righteous politicians who protect its people with law and judgement from the enemy, swiftly.”
That is the tension. And the Gospel doesn’t flatten it. It holds it.
Look at Jesus in Gethsemane. John 18 — the armed mob comes to arrest Him. Who stands between Jesus and His own people? Not the crowd. Not the Sanhedrin. Jesus Himself.
“So Jesus, knowing all the things that would come upon Him, went forth and said to them, ‘Whom do you seek?’ They answered Him, ‘Jesus of Nazareth.’ Jesus said to them, ‘I am He.’ And Judas, who betrayed Him, also stood with them. As soon as He said to them, ‘I am He,’ they drew back and fell to the ground.” (John 18:4–6, NKJV)
He did not abandon His disciples. Not one. And John records that this was in fulfilment of his words in previous chapter (17:12): “Of those whom You gave Me I have lost none.” (John 18:9) He stepped in front of them. He put His own body between the enemy and His own.
This is the shape of Christian manhood. Love your enemies. Preach the Gospel to every tongue. And when the enemy comes at your people — your children, your daughters, your neighbours — stand your ground. Protect. Defend. Judge.
We must do both. Not one without the other. A Christianity that only loves enemies but won’t protect the beloved is not the Christianity of the Gospels.
The church must wake up. Christians must engage the civic realm. This is not politics — this is justice. And God is a God of justice.