Oxford Child Pedophile Ring Case: Seven Filthy Muslim Immigrants Found Guilty of Child Rape, Trafficking and Organizing Prostitution

The belated conviction of seven men who groomed and sexually abused children in Oxford reveals an appalling failure of care

Kevin Rawlinson
Indpendent
May 14, 2013

The little girls were White. Are you angry yet?
The little girls were White. Are you angry yet?

The sexual abuse of young girls as young as 11 at the hands of one of Britain’s biggest child sex gangs was allowed to continue for around six years after the first victim came forward.

Police and local authorities apologised for their failure to stop the abuse earlier as seven members of the Oxford-based gang were found guilty of a range of sex and drug offences at the Old Bailey in London.

Child protection experts said that the six victims of the ring were “let down by those who were meant to care for them and obvious signs of abuse were missed”.

The fact that the gang was able to continue its campaign of brutal sexual abuse despite the concerns of social workers and reports to police officers at a relatively early stage will now be the subject of an independent investigation.

The seven men, aged between 27 and 38, were warned to expect long jail terms for their involvement in the gang’s eight years of offending involving vulnerable young girls in Oxford. Judge Peter Rook told them: “You have been convicted of the most serious of offences. Long custodial sentences are inevitable.”

Two sets of brothers, Akhtar Dogar, 32, and Anjum Dogar, 31, and Mohammed Karrar, 38, and Bassam Karrar, 33, were convicted of sex crimes, along with Kamar Jamil, 27, Assad Hussain, 32, and Zeeshan Ahmed, 27. Fighting broke out in the dock at the Old Bailey as Zeeshan Ahmed punched Mohammed Hussain, who was cleared of all charges. Another man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was also cleared.

A Serious Case Review panel headed by leading child protection barrister David Spicer will look into the failure to stop the gang, which first appeared on Thames Valley Police’s radar in early 2006 when one of the victims told officers she was being held against her will. The report of the girl in question was later added to by others, but police did not arrest the gang members until early 2012.

Oxfordshire County Council’s failure to protect the girls will also be investigated. Many of the victims – who can only be referred to as Girls A through F for legal reasons – were living in care homes in the Oxford area while they were being groomed and sexually abused by the gang and other men.

Both of the Dogar brothers, as well as Bassam Karrar, were arrested at different times between August and November 2006 after abuse allegations were made. But all three were later released and were able to continue offending for another six years after the cases against them were dropped because the girls were unable or unwilling to give evidence.

Some of the victims in this case were also being abused simultaneously by other men, four of whom were subsequently charged. Two of the cases collapsed but Armit Singh, 32, and Ricky Krong, 39, were jailed for sexual activity with children. Yet despite those four cases clearly indicating that the victims were at risk of child sex exploitation, the chance to end their ordeal at the hands of the gang was again missed.

The first known case of grooming by the gang started in 2004 and took two years to come to the police’s attention. In February 2006, officers spoke to Girl A, who said she had been held against her will by two Asian men. She said they “made her snort cocaine and left her unconscious”.

In August that year, police were called by Girl B after she was raped. She told officers who arrived at the house she was in – along with 11 men – that she was still a teenager and had run away from a children’s home. But she did not tell them of any sexual contact with any of the men and later refused to go any further with her complaint.

In September 2006, police began investigating Girl A’s case. She was found in the company of one of the gang, who was interviewed over allegations of raping her. But, having denied the claims, he was allowed to walk free and would continue his abuse of her and other girls for more than five years.

Police were also to come into repeated contact with the men during 2006 – on at least one occasion while they were in the company of some of the victims. In November of that year, Girl C contacted police after being repeatedly raped, beaten and abused by Bassam Karrar. She made a complaint, but later withdrew it.

During the four-month trial, the jury heard that one of the girls in care went missing 126 times and it was the “general consensus” among staff at her home that she was being sexually groomed. They saw her being picked up from the home where she was living in 2007 and 2008 by older men and passed on their concerns to police.

But it was not until February 2011 that Thames Valley Police and Oxfordshire County Council recognised that the city had a problem with the sexual abuse of children – and not until May that year that the pattern of abuse became apparent and an investigation opened. It would be a further 10 months before the gang could be arrested.

Thames Valley Police admitted that they were too reliant on the girls themselves coming forward to report the abuse they suffered. “These young women were put through a terrible ordeal. The nature of this abuse is that children were deliberately groomed, making it harder for them to resist abuse and hard for them to report it. Thames Valley Police and Oxfordshire County Council Social Services deeply regret that this activity wasn’t identified sooner,” said Detective Chief Superintendent Rob Mason.

Two of the children’s homes in the area where the victims were living have since been closed down.

The systems in place to protect children from harm and help them stay safe at one of the homes where some of the girls stayed was found to be “inadequate” at three successive Ofsted inspections in the year to May 2008.

In their May 2008 report, inspectors wrote: “There is a lack of a coherent strategy to discourage absconding behaviour… There is not a proactive approach to making the environment a safe and secure place for young people.” On one occasion, Girls A and B had returned to their home in a taxi, but Girl B was not able to persuade staff to pay the fare, so the driver took Girl A back to Oxford where she was abused and raped again the next day.

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