Vile Somalian Rape Gang Jailed for Trafficking and Gang-Raping Vulnerable Non-Black School Girls

Daily Stormer
November 27, 2014

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The victim’s were not Black, as they did not know anything about Black culture or traditions.

Many people believe that the greatest part of diversity is enrichment.  While others argue that the most vibrant benefit of enrichment is diverse vibrancy.

Is it possible they are all correct?

Has there ever been anything more vibrant than diverse enrichment?

Maybe we should ask the girls trafficked and gang-raped by these Somalians if they are aware of anything more vibrant than diversity.

Shropshire Star:

Victims as young as 13 were preyed upon, sexually abused and trafficked across Bristol to be passed around the men’s friends for money.

Many of the girls were groomed to view the abuse as a normal part of being the “girlfriend” of a Somali man, as it was “culture and tradition” to be raped by their “boyfriend’s” friends.

One defendant, an aspiring boxer, forced a victim to be raped by his younger brother in a bid to save him from going to hell as he “wanted to turn gay”.

On another occasion, the 13-year-old girl was raped four times by three different men, having been trafficked across Bristol to a Premier Inn by one of her abusers.

Police officers investigating the case rescued one victim from a cupboard in a flat, where she was found weeping “they made me do stuff”, clad only in her underwear.

The case, now the subject of serious case reviews, follows similar exploitation of young girls across English towns and cities such as Rotherham, Rochdale, Oxford and Telford.

Avon and Somerset Police uncovered the two-year abuse against 10 girls during their investigation into the men, all of Somali heritage, codenamed Operation Brooke.

A total of 14 were convicted of charges including rape, sexual activity with a child, facilitating child prostitution, trafficking, paying for the sexual services of a child and drug offences.

Eight were jailed for between 18 months and 13 years following the first of two trials at Bristol Crown Court this summer.

A further seven defendants – including one who appeared in both trials – were convicted yesterday and will be sentenced by Judge Julian Lambert tomorrow.

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Evil Black beasts from the pit of Hell Mustapha Farah, Liban Abdi, Mustafa Deria, Idleh Osman, Abdulahi Aden, and Arafat Osman have all been found guilty of child rape and trafficking children.

Speaking after the case, Detective Inspector Gary Stephens, of Avon and Somerset Police, said: “These offenders took advantage of vulnerable young girls and exploited them for their own benefit.

“The crimes outlined in the first trial were interwoven with the offenders’ desire to sell class A drugs in the community.

“In the second trial, the focus was more on the predatory and calculated nature of the offenders in identifying the most vulnerable victims to abuse.”

DI Stephens said the victims came from “very diverse and cosmopolitan” backgrounds and warned such abuse could happen to any child.

Police have nine other investigations into child sexual exploitation in the Avon and Somerset force area, with officers following up leads from Operation Brooke inquiries.

The first trial featured a group of drug dealers based in the Stapleton Road area of Easton in Bristol and their exploitation of primarily one teenage girl.

She had been placed in a flat on her own in the city and left almost unsupervised by social workers from outside Bristol.

Liban Abdi, 21, Mustapha Farah, 21, Arafat Osman, 20, Idleh Osman, 22, Abdulahi Aden, 20, Said Zakaria, 22, Mustafa Deria, 22, and Deria’s cousin Mohamed Jama, 20, were jailed for either child sexual exploitation or drugs offences.

The second trial focused on another group of young Somali men – including Zakaria – and their grooming and sexual abuse of young girls in the city.

Mohamed Jumale, 24, Mohamed Dahir, 22, Zakaria, Jusuf Abdirazak, 20, Omar Jumale, 20, Abdirashid Abdulahi, 21 and Sakariah Sheik, 21, were all convicted of child sexual exploitation offences.

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There is nothing even remotely human within the eyes of Mohamed Jumale, Said Zakaria, Sakariah Sheikh, Mohamed Dahir, Omar Jumale, Abdirashid Abdulahi and Jusef Abdirizak.