Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Britain’s Rape Gang Scandal Inquiry Report: A National Reckoning and Warning for America

by Peter McIlvenna
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British flag waving against a clear blue sky, symbolizing the United Kingdom's national identity and heritage.

British flag waving against a clear blue sky, symbolizing the United Kingdom's national identity and heritage.

The 219-page Rape Gang Inquiry Report, released on June 16, 2026, was led by Reform UK MP Rupert Lowe and survivor advocate Sammy Woodhouse. Funded by more than 20,000 British supporters, this investigation reveals a major failure in child protection. It documents the systematic grooming, rape, trafficking, and abuse of at least 250,000 vulnerable White British girls by mostly Muslim Pakistani gangs throughout the UK.

The report’s main finding is clear. Organized groups, with 87-95% of convicted offenders having Muslim names, mostly of Pakistani background, targeted girls as young as 11 from unstable homes and care systems. Groomers used gifts, alcohol, drugs, and attention to lure victims, then took them to various locations for repeated abuse. They filmed the abuse for blackmail, trafficked victims, used pregnancies for control, forced conversions, and treated the girls inhumanely. These patterns appeared in at least 149 local authority districts, nearly 40% of the UK, showing the problem was widespread and had been happening since the 1950s.

Survivor stories, such as “Chloe’s”—who was abused by hundreds of mainly Pakistani Muslim men, trafficked across the country, forcibly converted, and left with lifelong trauma and a child born from rape—are at the heart of the report. Parents and whistleblowers also described the horror: girls missing for days, 13-year-olds with STIs, and repeated failures by institutions.

The report shows that institutions failed completely. Police ignored reports, destroyed evidence, released offenders, and treated victims as “prostitutes.” Social services put children in places where they were trafficked, worked against protective parents, and punished whistleblowers.

The NHS treated injuries and pregnancies, but sent girls back to their abusers.

Schools and taxi licensing also helped these networks operate. The main reason for these failures was a deep fear of being called racist or Islamophobic. Efforts to keep “community cohesion” and win votes from Muslim communities were put ahead of child safety.

The Labour Party blocked investigations and hid ethnicity data, while the Conservatives did not enforce proper record-keeping. Even London’s leadership under Sadiq Khan denied the problem, despite evidence from the Metropolitan Police.

The report does not hold back in its analysis of demographics, culture, and religion. Honor-shame traditions led to non-Muslim girls being seen as sexual property. The report points to eight aspects of Islamic theology—such as supremacism, al-walā’ wa-l-barā’ (hostility toward non-Muslims), male dominance, no set age of consent, fitna, sex slavery teachings, and dhimmitude—as reinforcing these attitudes. The report says these issues must be discussed openly.

The report offers clear recommendations for the future. It calls for a Childhood Sexual Protection Act to establish key principles:

  • Victim-First Justice: National Independent Sexual Violence Advisers, trauma-informed courts, and statutory weight for victim statements.
  • Zero-Tolerance Sentencing: Life imprisonment with minimum 50-year tariffs for ringleaders and 25 years for participants; aggravating factors for religious/racial motivation, trafficking, and organised networks; cumulative (not concurrent) sentences; and a public referendum on the death penalty for the worst cases.
  • Cultural and Demographic Realism: Mandatory recording of offender ethnicity and religion; open examination of patterns without political censorship.
  • Deportation and Border Security: Automatic removal of foreign and dual-national offenders and complicit family members; visa restrictions on high-risk countries.
  • Family Empowerment: Place protective families (especially fathers) at the heart of safeguarding, with penalties for authorities who undermine them.
  • Institutional Accountability: Liability for officials paralysed by racism fears; compensation schemes funded by negligent parties and perpetrator assets.
  • Prevention: Dedicated taskforces, overseas victim recovery, closure of complicit institutions, and multi-agency overhaul.

This is not just a British issue; it is a serious warning for America. As the US faces challenges with border security, migration, and cultural integration, Britain’s experience shows the dangers when political correctness clashes with demographic realities.

Multicultural policies brought in honour-shame traditions that led to abuse of local girls. Leaders in both the UK and US need to put child protection ahead of political interests.

The Rape Gang Inquiry Report is a call to action. The full testimonies should be released, and civil and criminal cases must follow. For Americans, the report highlights the need for secure borders, strong expectations for integration, and a firm defense of Western values. Britain’s daughters deserved better, and so do America’s.

The post Britain’s Rape Gang Scandal Inquiry Report: A National Reckoning and Warning for America appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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