Moslem Police and Politicians were Complicit in the Sex Abuse in Rotherham

Diversity Macht Frei
February 26, 2016

Corrupt police and an influential politician fuelled a culture of impunity that allowed three brothers to “own” the town of Rotherham and abuse children until their crimes were exposed by The Times.

One officer had sex with under-age girls, passed drugs to the sex-grooming gang and tipped them off when colleagues were searching for missing children, a court was told. Another helped to broker a deal in which one brother returned an abused girl to police after receiving an assurance that he “wouldn’t get done”.

The jury was told that Jahangir Akhtar, the former deputy leader of Rotherham council, also took part in the handover at a petrol station. Mr Akhtar, the former deputy chairman of South Yorkshire police and crime panel, was a relative of Arshid, Basharat and Bannaras Hussain, who behaved for years “like a pack of animals” to pursue dozens of young girls before demanding sex, often with threats of violence.

As their trial ended yesterday, it was revealed that the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) had begun 55 investigations into alleged police misconduct linked to Rotherham child sex crimes. It has received complaints against 92 named officers.

An investigation into all past sex grooming cases in the town, begun in June and led by the National Crime Agency, has identified more than 300 suspects and 9,000 lines of inquiry. Children lured into the Hussain brothers’ web of alcohol, drugs, guns and cars believed that the wealthy trio, known as Ash, Bash and Bono, were above the law. It was a perception aided by the wilful blindness of child protection authorities, Sheffield crown court was told.

No criminal inquiry into the brothers’ offending was launched until The Times revealed in 2013 that police and social services held, but had failed to act on, detailed intelligence that Arshid Hussain was among a small group of men suspected of sexually exploiting more than 40 under-age girls.

Less than two weeks later, Rotherham council commissioned an independent inquiry by Alexis Jay, a social services expert, which found that 1,400 girls in the South Yorkshire town were groomed and abused over 16 years. The offenders were “almost all” men of Pakistani heritage.

… One officer, said by a witness to have had sex with girls and to have passed drugs to Arshid Hussain, is under investigation by his own force and by the IPCC, the jury was told. He denies wrongdoing. The officer allegedly involved in the petrol station handover, PC Hassan Ali, died in February last year. He was fatally injured in a traffic collision on the day he was told that he was under investigation.

Between them, the two officers accessed police intelligence databases “without apparent legitimate policing purpose” on at least nine occasions between 2006 and 2011, the court was told. They searched each time for information about the Hussain brothers.

Source

Europeans are the only people who have sustainably tried to construct a civilisation the basis of abstract standards of justice and conduct, ignoring the factor of kin preference (with an ethnic group being understood as an extended kin group), which dominates every non-European culture.

A people practising altruism and individualism as an evolutionary strategy is fatally vulnerable to infiltration by peoples practising non-altruistic and non-individualistic strategies. Thus we see the corruption of European society by Muslims and Jews. Yet this idea, that instruments of state power can be subverted from within by an alien people pursuing its own narrow ethnic interests, is the ultimate taboo to our ruling class, since it represents a fundamental challenge to their ideology.  It was always be the last truth to emerge from any cover-up and sometimes will never emerge at all.

We saw this in the Janner case, with Greville Janner, a prince of Jewry, being protected by other powerful Jews within the system. At key points, when evidence of Janner’s wrong-doing emerged, the person making the decision about whether or not to prosecute was a Jew. It is reasonable to suspect that some ethnic favouritism was taking place. Yet this possibility was never even mentioned in the Establishment news outlets.