Skip to content

Ahem

Rotherham police sexually abused us too, say five grooming victims
Victim claims serving officer threatened to hand her back to her abusers if she did not comply

No, we do not know the names, backgrounds, of those it is claimed did this. Well, we do one, for he’s dead and so named.

On the other hand every single one of us is wholly certain we know the cultural – racial – background of those it is claimed did this. Which is a problem, isn’t it?

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

13 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
JuliaM
5 months ago

Is it a problem? If so, for whom?

John
John
5 months ago

https://pressway.org.uk/news/300525-cex_drugs_and_silence_how_rotherham_police_covered_up_paedophile_gangs_and_took_part_in_rapes_themselves

At the time, the IOPC and SYP were aware of a second officer accused of abuse against children, he adds, but SYP had allowed the officer to retire.

“At best it was a reputational covering exercise. That’s me being incredibly generous to them. At worst, it was out and out corruption to let him go.”

Julia
In a normal world I would say that was a pretty big problem for SYP.

Matt
Matt
5 months ago

@John

But it’s not a normal world is it? It’s clown world. Where people have no appearance, nationality or names unless they’re white British.

And even then they’re quite probably lying. Like when Southport was a Welsh choirboy… not until much much later do we find out that his name wasn’t Taffy Jones.

There’s an extent to which I’m pleased we’ve got the most Davos-y Labour government in office: they’re too incompetent to do a proper cover-up and have the lawyerly belief that their saying something that makes it true. That like in a court, only the evidence that is presented is allowed to be taken into consideration. It means that those who wish us harm aren’t even trying to hide what they’re doing any more, “rubbing our faces in” their ability to behave cravenly. To the point that it isn’t just the types who hang out on Timmy’s blog that have noticed, but large chunks of the provincial middle class.

Because of the way that the blob handled Brexit, party allegiances — which in some cases are generational — are up in the air. Boris, for all his failings (and they are legion*), and with help from Corbyn, did at least open up a lot of people to no longer automatically voting Labour “‘cos my dad did.” Not everybody is going to vote along Brexit lines at the next GE, but it does appear to have defined the constituencies of the rooted vs. the nomads, and that is the new dividing line.** There are a lot of parties competing for the 48% and at most one-and-a-half for the 52%.

* or possibly just one: the bird. I suspect that if he’d stayed with Marina Wheeler the country would be in a much better place than it is now, and he would probably still be PM.
** not just here, either — although Brexit was the line in the sand where the rooted realised they were a majority — or in the USA where Trump stood against the nomads, but throughout the developed world. Even in Japan there has been a backlash against the limited (relative to other developed countries) amount of immigration.

Bloke in Germany
Bloke in Germany
5 months ago

Matt, I’m definitely one of the rootless nomads and the whole lot also stinks to me. A cravenly complicit media is the barrier to reaching a whole lot more of the nomads.

Marius
Marius
5 months ago

And even then they’re quite probably lying.

The lying, obfuscation and gaslighting continues apace. I am sure that South Yorkshire Filth would have loved to wipe this all under the nearest tear-stained carpet and they will still do this given half a chance. Just as the filth in office will ensure any public enquiry is a travesty.

This story should have been front page of the Telegraph but was down the page and – of course – no comments allowed. Police officers accused of raping children gets less coverage than Tommy Robinson having an altercation (caught on camera naturally).

One thing to add; bearing in mind the record of Plod when it comes to sexual assault, it wouldn’t surprise me if the officers concerned came from a broader demographic.

Esteban
Esteban
5 months ago

I was of the impression that the cops didn’t do anything about this because they’d be crucified as islamophobes, but now I wonder if they just thought, hey we can get laid too! Jeebus

Paul, Somerset
Paul, Somerset
5 months ago

From the Pressway report linked above:

‘But the BBC understands that one alleged victim, Willow – in a report to police – has named PC Hassan Ali as having raped her.
“The first time, he literally said: ’You do it for the other officer. So you’re gonna do it for me,’” she tells us.
PC Ali died in January 2015, a week after he was hit by a car. On the day the collision took place, he had been put on restricted duties because of an investigation into alleged misconduct in the abuse scandal. He was never arrested.’

It’s unlikely that PC Hassan Ali was concerned about being called an islamophobe.

Chernyy Drakon
Chernyy Drakon
5 months ago

And the public’s faith in the plod falls even lower.

Even average middle class types are starting to realise that Plod isn’t there to help them.

A lot of people who previously would be supportive of the police during disorder will be starting to be more supportive of the protesters and rioters.

Swannypol
Swannypol
5 months ago

Theres a german expression current at the moment:
They didn’t say, so you know.

Jonathan
Jonathan
5 months ago

Paul:

It’s unlikely that PC Hassan Ali was concerned about being called an islamophobe.

No, but I’d bet he would’ve been the first to call white officers just that.

Western Bloke
Western Bloke
5 months ago

Matt,

“Because of the way that the blob handled Brexit, party allegiances — which in some cases are generational — are up in the air. Boris, for all his failings (and they are legion*), and with help from Corbyn, did at least open up a lot of people to no longer automatically voting Labour “‘cos my dad did.””

This was already in motion. Those generational allegiances were already unravelling for a couple of other reasons. Blair didn’t do much for them, and the industry was shifting to private sector, like warehousing, servicing and manufacturing isn’t unionised and generally leans more towards the right now (less taxes). You could see the decline of Dennis Skinner’s massive majority over the years, even before Brexit.

There was a lot of talk about Boris “breaking the red wall” that imagined they were still Labour minded people, wanting more government. But that’s just living in the past. Labour look after union members, who are no longer blokes bashing rivets. They left unions long ago. It’s public sector monopolies. If you’re a rivet basher you are just paying more for a bloated public sector administration. There’s no reason to be in a union now. If you don’t like your rivet bashing job, you have a car, you go to another one.

“Not everybody is going to vote along Brexit lines at the next GE, but it does appear to have defined the constituencies of the rooted vs. the nomads, and that is the new dividing line.** There are a lot of parties competing for the 48% and at most one-and-a-half for the 52%.”

I think (and there may be a connection) that it’s also about the divide of those that give to the state and those that take from it. Whether in the form of bollocks jobs in Whitehall or the government protecting your industry. The loudest remoaner voices were people I knew that could be put on the Golgafrinchan B Ark. A woman in the museum service, someone at the BBC. The people at the factory I worked in that sold all over the world were mostly leave.

Everyone tries to make out that Farage is all about “racism” or whatever, but really, they’re petrified that their pointless fucking jobs are going to disappear. No-one will say that, but there will be disruption if Reform wins, and some of the crap will be binned and those people will go out into the public sector who will tell them to fuck off.

Norman
Norman
5 months ago

WB, indeed. There are many cozy “activist” retirements on the line. Look at XR. They’re either blue-haired Trustafarians or retired leaders of Reading Council. Or senile vicars. How nice.

Tom J
Tom J
5 months ago

but really, they’re petrified that their pointless fucking jobs are going to disappear. No-one will say that, but there will be disruption if Reform wins, and some of the crap will be binned and those people will go out into the public sector who will tell them to fuck off.

Durham Council, previously as red as they came, lost its Lab majority in ’21 for the first time in a century. This year Reform won a substantial majority. The have announced that they’re binning DEI training, the first sign of the remora being cleared from the public sector…

13
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x