Operation Sanctuary – more from the Islamic Grooming Gang problems in the North East of England 

The bald and necessarily emotionless words of the police press release quoted below are just another indication of how bad the current problems of Islamic sex criminals are, especially in the North East of England. Police have made 120 arrests in just one operation against Islamic sex criminals in one police area. Those of us who have been following the Operation Sanctuary story, will have been appalled to see the number of those arrested rise and rise as the case has progressed.

Operation Sanctuary has uncovered a frightening number of girls and women who allege that they have been attacked by what seems to be primarily Muslim gangs in the North East of England. There could be hundreds of victims of this organised conspiracy to groom, assault and even sell women for the purposes of sexual abuse. Northumbria Police are trying to pretend that this is a cross-community issue but by examining the names of those arrested and those who have been charged, it is plain to see that this is primarily an Islamic problem. Police have also said that taxis, which as you will probably know in many areas are controlled by Muslims, have been used to ferry victims from one abuse setting to another. What has been happening in Newcastle, and other parts of the North East, appears to be a highly organised and deliberate enterprise by Muslim gangs that targeted, and probably continues to target, non-Muslim girls and young women, some of whom could be classed as vulnerable. These gangs appear to have been able to act with virtual impunity, until Northumbria Police set up Operation Sanctuary.

As time has gone on, there have been more and more arrests as part of Operation Sanctuary and here are the latest ones:

Northumbria Police said:

Two men have been charged as part of Operation Sanctuary.

The two have been charged in connection with two separate incidents that are not linked.

Rashid Rehman, 41, of Whittington Grove, Fenham, Newcastle, has been charged with sexual assault by touching of a female aged over 13. The charge is in relation to an incident in Newcastle that happened on April 20.
He will appear at Newcastle Magistrates’ Court on September 1.

Awan Shahnawaz, 32, of Wingrove Gardens, Fenham, Newcastle, has been charged with sexual assault by touching of a female aged over 13. The charge is in relation to an incident in Newcastle that happened on March 3.
He will appear at Newcastle Magistrates’ Court on August 29.

Police have now made 120 arrests as part of the investigation. The total number of charges stands at 21.

While it is very good that police are now acting in a concerted manner about these sort of offences, the question does need to be asked, why did they not act before? Is it because they could not gather the required amount of evidence for prosecution, or was it because they were overly concerned with ‘community cohesion’ issues? If it is for the first reason then the blame for lack of action lies with the politicians, prosecutors and others who make the legal conditions under which the police have to operate.

If it is for the second reason then blame lies with the police force concerned. If police officers have not investigated these and similar crimes because they are pandering to Muslims for political or advancement reasons or are not acting because officers fear a career-damaging ‘racism’ claim, then the fault lies with police management. It is not too far-fetched to say that the police, in some areas, have become ‘bent’ with regards to Islam.

On too many occasions, we have seen police officers, not just in Northumbria but elsewhere, including in the West Midlands and the Metropolitan Police forces, ‘go easy’ on crimes committed by Muslims, in order to avoid stirring up Muslim anger or damaging a senior officer’s plans for career advancement. Britain’s police forces need to lose the political correctness and their blind allegiance to the cult of ‘diversity’ that they were straitjacketed in after the Macpherson Report, and start applying the law to all without fear or favour.

An adherence to the failed ideology of multiculturalism is not a acceptable substitute for keeping the Queen’s Peace. Where there appears to be a conflict between the two, everyday policing concerns have to take priority and protecting young women and children from harm has to be one of their most important duties. This should be the lesson that both the police officer and the civilian need to learn from both this operation and other similar ones.

Links

Original Press Release dated 20th August 2014 from Northumbria Police

http://www.northumbria.police.uk/news_and_events/news/details.asp?id=97921&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

Operation Sanctuary update list from Northumbria Police

https://www.northumbria.police.uk/advice_and_information/operation_sanctuary/updates/

Operation Sanctuary Homepage

http://www.northumbria.police.uk/advice_and_information/operation_sanctuary/

Summary of the Macpherson Report from the Guardian

http://www.theguardian.com/uk/1999/feb/24/lawrence.ukcrime12

The Macpherson Report itself

https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/277111/4262.pdf

From elsewhere on Fahrenheit211 on the subject of Operation Sanctuary

https://www.fahrenheit211.net/2014/02/13/up-to-80-victims-in-latest-alleged-islamic-grooming-gang-case/

https://www.fahrenheit211.net/2014/03/28/67-arrests-now-in-grooming-gang-probe-in-newcastle-upon-tyne/

3 Comments on "Operation Sanctuary – more from the Islamic Grooming Gang problems in the North East of England "

  1. Hugh Mungus | August 22, 2014 at 2:03 pm |

    No BBC helicopters for that though !

  2. I never heard this one before that If a person from any religious background commits a crime in uk,the police doesn’t act appropriately as they are scared of community clash. Come on newspapers let police carry on their good work and make streets safer.i am a muslim by the way and I am against any crime.

    • Fahrenheit211 | August 29, 2014 at 6:49 am |

      Well done for saying that you are against any crime that is the attitude that we should all have. There is a world of difference between a reasonable accommodation of difference, such as the police being aware that that they may see the highly unusual sight of Jews being a bit drunk during the festival of Purim, or a few fireworks during the Hindu festival of Dwali and turning a blind eye to actual crime. I don’t know about if offenders from any religious background are considered non-arrestable, but I have heard rumours that some police areas are holding back from dealing with antisocial behaviour during Ramadan and Eid. This soft-pedaling on actual crime does none of us any favours.

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