Report Details Breadth Of This Terrible Epidemic
The United Kingdom is facing renewed outrage after an independent report alleged that organized r**e gangs abused children and young women on a massive scale while authorities failed to stop them. The report, titled…
The United Kingdom is facing renewed outrage after an independent report alleged that organized r**e gangs abused children and young women on a massive scale while authorities failed to stop them.
The report, titled “The R**e Gang Inquiry Report,” was released Wednesday and led by Rupert Lowe, the member of Parliament for Great Yarmouth and head of the Restore Britain party.
In the foreword, Lowe described the findings in stark terms.
“As is the case with many decent, hard-working Britons, I was unaware of the sheer scale of the evil that has been, and continues to be, perpetrated by chiefly Pakistani Muslim men against vulnerable young white women and girls in communities up and down our country,” he wrote.
He said a single court transcript from one case, which was amplified by Elon Musk last year, helped spark a wider public reckoning and led more than 20,000 people to fund the inquiry.
“What follows is a comprehensive report of its findings,” Lowe wrote.
He later said the inquiry “confirms that this scandal constitutes one of the most horrendous failures in the history of the country.”
Advertisement
According to the report, the inquiry was survivor-led. Its format centered on daily sessions where a rotating panel of guests spoke with survivor and activist Sammy Woodhouse, along with a group of experts. Survivors, parents, caretakers, and others were given a platform to describe what they said they had seen, endured, or been forced to confront.
Some testimony dealt with r**e, pregnancy, abortion, and children allegedly born as a result of abuse. Other accounts focused on failures by police, social services, and public officials.
A central claim of the report is that the crimes were not simply missed by authorities but allowed to continue through years of active or passive failure.
The report states that it “demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt that the r**e gangs operated with either the active or passive consent of public authorities.”
“The scale of the crimes committed is staggering,” the report said. “It has been previously established that, at the very least, 250,000 young white girls have been subjected to repeated r**e, gang r**e, trafficking, torture, pregnancy, forced Islamic conversion, and lifelong trauma.
“The true number is probably higher.”
The report also said the perpetrators bear the main responsibility for the alleged crimes, but that institutions that failed to protect victims must also be held accountable.
Advertisement
It described a grooming pattern in which young girls, some reportedly as young as 11, were approached by older men who treated them like adults, gave them alcohol and drugs, and gradually pulled them into dangerous situations.
“After a few months, the girls would then be collected from school gates, care homes, and streets in taxis,” the report stated. “They were taken to houses, flats, restaurants, and hotels where they were r**ed repeatedly by groups of men, tortured, filmed for blackmail, and told they were ‘white trash’ or ‘kuffar’ who merited punishment. Many became pregnant while still children.”
The report quickly drew attention online. Within hours, The Telegraph published a separate story focusing not on the inquiry’s claims, but on allegations about Restore Britain’s funding and its reported ties to white supremacists.
GB News, by contrast, highlighted the report more directly. One anchor shared his reaction online, writing, “250,000+ women and girls sacrificed at the altar of multiculturalism.”