A good column by Trevor Kavanagh in today's Sun - echos my thoughts 100%
Fourteen hundred under-age girls raped or abused in Rotherham. Perhaps as many again in towns and cities across the land with large numbers of Pakistani-origin men. Only five men have been put in jail, thanks entirely to pressure from newspapers. But it is not just the rapists who deserve to be locked away. The mostly-white, mostly-Labour politicians and police, who for so long turned a blind eye in the name of "community cohesion", should also be in the dock. They represent a political class, backed by the BBC, who waved in millions of migrants during 13 years of Labour government under the discredited flag of multiculturalism. Their avowed objective was to change the face of Britain which they deemed to be "too white". Their motive, blurted out by a Labour activist, was to wrong-foot the Tories and condemn as "racist" anybody who asked why. Once people learned they could treat young white girls like pieces of meat, they took full advantage. Police not only turned a blind eye, they lost or destroyed evidence of alleged rape and threatened worried parents with prosecution if they tried to protect their youngsters.
It is shocking that only one Rotherham councillor has so far resigned. It is a national disgrace the nobody on the council or in the police has been sacked or charged. South Yorkshire police are curiously reluctant to act. They must not be allowed to write it all off as "in the past". Indeed, the police and Crown Prosecution Service have done little else but pursue historic sex crimes since pervert Jimmy Savile was unmasked. This month alone, the same South Yorkshire force invaded the home of pop star Sir Cliff Richard on the say-so of someone allegedly abused in the Eighties. There is something wrong when police can ignore mass rape under their noses, while staging a publicity stunt for the BBC without enough evidence so far to make an arrest. There are increasing signs of police and prosecutors acting as a law unto themselves. The Crown Prosecution Service is involved in the biggest and most costly crime investigation in history — not into murders and mayhem but into journalists. Yet they have ignored a decade-long catalogue of rape, brutality and coercion of young girls, many of them in what is laughably called council "care". This is a live criminal inquiry. It must be pursued with maximum force. The Prime Minister rightly condemned the recent rape and abduction of young girls in Africa. It's time he stopped people doing the same thing on his own doorstep.
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