The Rape Gang Inquiry in Britain has revealed a damning picture of systemic abuse, with Pakistani Muslim rape gangs identified as operating in 85 local authorities across the United Kingdom. The inquiry, launched by MP Rupert Lowe, received testimony from hundreds of survivors, families, and whistleblowers, making it one of the most comprehensive exposes of the grooming gang crisis to date.
Cases were identified from Aberdeen to Plymouth, Antrim to Canterbury, with some instances dating back to the 1960s. The report underscores chilling “patterns of targeted exploitation by predominantly Pakistani males, combined with gross negligence from public bodies.”
Lowe, who spearheaded the investigation, said: “Our inquiry has shown that this rotting scandal is more widespread than thought – hundreds of thousands of lives have been ruined at the hands of predominantly Pakistani rape gangs. The message from survivors is clear: too many broken promises, now is the time for hard justice.”
Complicity and Failure of Authorities
One of the most shocking findings is the complicity of local authorities and police, who, out of fear of being labeled racist or Islamophobic, ignored countless complaints and allowed abuse to continue unchecked for decades.
In Rotherham alone, an estimated 1,400 children were abused between 1997 and 2013 by gangs primarily of Pakistani descent. Similar horrors unfolded in Telford, where around 1,000 girls were exploited in a town of just 170,000 people, with reports of rape houses and even child murders. In Rochdale, at least 47 young girls were groomed and raped from 2002 onward.
In many cases, police not only failed to act but went as far as arresting victims or their families under petty charges, instead of targeting the perpetrators. Judges and political leaders frequently downplayed the ethnic and religious identity of the offenders, calling the abuse “coincidental” or stressing that the community should not be “stigmatised.”
This obsession with political correctness created an environment where predators acted with near impunity, while vulnerable girls—some as young as 11—were trafficked, raped, beaten, and sold.
Patterns of Abuse and Neglect
The report highlights a systematic pattern of exploitation, not isolated incidents. Survivors described being lured with gifts, alcohol, and cigarettes before being passed between abusers. Many were beaten, threatened, or told their families would be harmed if they spoke out.
The National Audit on Group-Based Child Sexual Exploitation revealed that over 500,000 children a year may be experiencing sexual abuse in the UK, with 17,000 flagged as child sexual exploitation cases. However, only 700 grooming cases were logged in a new police database — a figure described by investigators as a gross underestimation of the true scale.
In Rotherham, 64% of offenders convicted under Operation Stovewood were Pakistani men. Despite these numbers, public bodies consistently downplayed the scale and identity of offenders. Labour MP Sarah Champion, who once wrote that “Britain has a problem with British Pakistani men raping and exploiting white girls,” was forced to resign after backlash. Similarly, Labour politician Keith Vaz dismissed the grooming gang crimes as “not racially motivated.”
Such denial created a culture where the victims were ignored and the perpetrators shielded, leaving the scandal to grow unchecked for decades.
85 cities in Britain where local authorities were complicit in the rape of children … https://t.co/20tp9VFFAv
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 26, 2025
Growing Public Anger and Calls for Action
Public frustration has been fueled by repeated government promises of action that never materialised. Survivors and campaigners argue that inquiries and reports have become little more than symbolic gestures while predators continue to roam free.
Elon Musk, commenting on the report, said on X: “85 cities in Britain where local authorities were complicit in the rape of children…” His words captured the outrage many feel over years of cover-ups and negligence.
The scandal is not only about the perpetrators but also about state betrayal. For decades, British institutions placed political image above child protection. Survivors who tried to speak out were silenced or discredited, while communities were falsely reassured that such cases were “isolated.”
As Rupert Lowe emphasised, this is no longer a localised issue but a nationwide epidemic. The inquiry will soon hold hearings, allowing victims to testify and experts to propose reforms. Campaigners demand stricter sentencing, greater accountability for authorities who failed, and a recognition of the cultural and religious factors behind the grooming epidemic.
Our Rape Gang Inquiry has today released research detailing eighty-five local authorities in which the gang-based sexual exploitation of children is taking place, or has historically done so.
This is one of the most comprehensive exposes of the rape gang scandal to date. pic.twitter.com/lRRRaQeuFN
— Rupert Lowe MP (@RupertLowe10) August 26, 2025
A National Shame Demanding Accountability
The revelations of the Rape Gang Inquiry are not just about the monstrous crimes of Pakistani Muslim grooming gangs but also about the colossal failure of the British state. For over four decades, young girls were sacrificed at the altar of political correctness. Fear of being accused of racism outweighed the responsibility to protect children, allowing predators to thrive.
This scandal is a national shame, one that requires more than inquiries and reports. Survivors demand justice, accountability, and systemic reform. Without genuine action, Britain risks repeating the same mistakes, leaving another generation of girls vulnerable to the very predators the system has enabled for far too long.
