Newcastle grooming gang jailed for raping 13-year-old girl
As the Labour government struggles to offer a genuine plan for a national inquiry into Asian-dominated ‘grooming/rape’ gangs which target vulnerable White British girls, the focus of some mainstream media outlets is switching away from the usual hot spots located in Greater Manchester, Lancashire, West and South Yorkshire and the Midlands to Newcastle Upon Tyne. At least GB News has been honest in its reporting on the national scale of this scandal and has recently switched its attention to the North-East.
The previous ‘grooming gang’ trials in Newcastle were reported by BM Northern region back in March 2024, and others before that, and noted that the rapists and drug dealers in the dock were not just Pakistani Muslims but a whole range of Muslim nationalities from Asia and the Middle East.
As this website has previously stated, it is hardly surprising to note that most of the mainstream news media outlets carefully avoid making any reference to the ethnic backgrounds of the convicted men. For left-wing and politically liberal ‘progressive’ journalists, criticism of the behaviour of ethnic minorities runs counter to their ideological commitment to multiculturalism and ‘diversity is our strength’.
Moreover, at the end of the Newcastle trial in 2024, the trial judge made a statement to the press that was referenced in the Casey Report. “A judge concluded that the defendants “selected their victims not because of their race, but because they were young, impressionable, naive, and vulnerable”, including young girls and women with learning difficulties and mental health issues.
How could the trial judge determine that race was not an issue? Especially in light of statements made to the police by the defendants saying that the girls were worthless because they were not Muslims and did not “dress modestly” or cover their hair. In addition, at the Syrian grooming gang trial in Newcastle in 2024, part of the defence was that one of the victims had complained to the police because, “she was a racist who hated Muslims” and this lie was repeated by the BBC in its limited coverage of the trial!
Moreover, surely the judge must have been aware of this key statement from the earlier Newcastle grooming gang trial in 2017; “A jury heard he made an outburst to a ticket collector on the Tyne and Wear Metro, saying: “All white women are good for one thing, for men like me to f*** and use as trash. That is all women like you are worth.”
So race was not an issue? Nor were statements by Pakistani Muslim rape gang defendants at trials in Yorkshire and Greater Manchester where the underage White victims were described as “easy meat”. To bring our readers up to date on how the North-East of England has suffered from the curse of the
grooming/rape gangs, British Movement Northern region offers this short recap:
Newcastle grooming gang jailed for raping 13-year-old girl
Published 1 March 2024
“A gang who groomed and raped a 13-year-old girl, using threats to kill and kidnap, have been handed jail terms.
“The four attackers were aged between 15 and 21 when they abused the victim between August 2018 and April 2019, Newcastle Crown Court heard. The girl said they “tortured” her, making childhood a “living nightmare.
“Brothers Omar and Mohamed Badreddin and Huzaefa Aleboud were found guilty of multiple rapes.
Hamoud Al Soaimi was found guilty of sexual assault.
“Judge Rippon said the Badreddin brothers, of Middle Garth in Newcastle, led the group and “quickly identified” the girl could be “manipulated” and “groomed”. She said they treated her like a “toy” and found it “entertaining”, exploiting her and using her for sex.”
And referenced in a regional overview and quoted in the Casey Report: “In 2017, 18 people were convicted of nearly 100 total offences including rape, child prostitution, supplying drugs to victims and trafficking for sexual exploitation. The offences took place in Newcastle between 2010 and 2014.
The perpetrators were men of Albanian, Kurdish, Bangladeshi, Turkish, Iranian, Iraqi, Eastern European and Pakistani ethnicity, aged between 27 and 44. One woman was convicted. The victims were girls and young women, aged between 13 and 25.”
In 2018, a serious case review into child sexual exploitation in Newcastle was published. It found: “With this particular model of abuse, whilst the individual beliefs of the perpetrators are not known, all appear to come from a non-white, predominantly Asian/British minority ethnic culture or background.”
This from the Casey Report sums up the situation in the North-East so far; Casey Report “She found disproportionate numbers of Asian men have been responsible for group-based child sexual abuse, but the authorities have “shied away” this, for fear of appearing racist or raising community tensions.”
The 197-page report contains a relatively small number of references to the North East. In a timeline of grooming gang cases around the country, it notes how, in 2013, Northumbria Police set up Operation Sanctuary to investigate allegations of the sexual exploitation of girls and young women in Newcastle. In 2015, a serious case review was commissioned after it emerged there were “potentially hundreds of victims of sexual exploitation in Newcastle, including children and vulnerable adults.”
And also these references to the 2024 Newcastle Syrian grooming gang trial: “In 2024, the members of a Newcastle grooming gang were jailed for raping a 13-year-old girl. Three of the men were from Syria, and one from Kuwait. They were aged between 15 and 21 when they abused the victim in 2018 and 2019.”
The Casey report says that “more often than not” local reviews into grooming gangs “do not discuss the perpetrators, let alone their ethnicity or any cultural drivers”.
It says the 2018 review carried out in Newcastle was an exception to this, recognising the lack of research which had been done into the cultural drivers of offending and recommending the government conduct research.
Casey says the Newcastle review took “an unusual step” of trying to understand the crimes by interviewing one of the offenders, who had claimed asylum in the UK. He spoke in a derogatory way about British girls, saying they had a lack of morals, and spoke about how he had easily been able to access sex, drugs and alcohol.
Casey’s report also says child sexual exploitation in Newcastle was an example of how taxis have often been used as a way ”for perpetrators to meet victims and for them to be trafficked to different locations.” At least the regional mainstream news media were honest enough to admit these findings, although most of the national MSM chose not to report this.
“Grooming gangs abused more than 700 women and girls around Newcastle after police appeared to punish victims.”
”Sexual exploitation is happening in towns and cities across the country,’ serious case review warns. After examining evidence on the abuse of hundreds of girls in the North-east, investigators concluded that local authorities claiming there is no grooming in their area “are not looking hard enough”.
Northumbria Police had identified more than 700 potential victims of grooming in the region by August through Operation Sanctuary but expected the number to rise.” That was many months ago, and there has so far been little further evidence of major action being taken by the authorities; hopefully this will now change.
The North-East of England has not been spared the levels of ‘cultural enrichment’ of grooming/rape gangs that have devastated communities in other parts of the country, and at long last this is being put under the national spotlight. It is important that this looks beyond Newcastle and Tyneside and takes in the whole of the North-East with equal attention being given to places like Middlesborough, Hartlepool and Sunderland.
Credits:
Main Image: Northumbria Police.
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