A theological enquiry is needed after Newcastle

Aug 17, 2017 by

CEN Editorial. 

It was the turn for Newcastle to reveal its own grisly, deep and wide sex ring as nearly 20 men were convicted of abusing young blue-collar girls, many in ‘care’. Rotherham, Rochdale, Oxford, Bury, Banbury, the list gets longer and the public gets more and more cynical about the failure of the authorities to root out this plague of maltreatment of young girls.

On this occasion the Newcastle police chief announced that his force had decided to put aside the imperative of political correctness so as to enforce the law without fear or favour, to give the prostituted, pimped, raped and virtually enslaved girls the legal protection due to any other type of citizen and child. This phenomenon of allowing groups of men a virtual free pass to do as they wish with such girls may be at long last coming to an end, a terrible stain on British law and the whole establishment of government which chose to look away and sacrifice thousands of blue-collar female victims on the altar of minority cultural norms.

Such is the pressure on politicians, police, the whole system of education and social services, not to act against such law-breaking when committed by certain minority cultures that the Rotherham MP, Sarah Champion, said she was scared to enter the fray on behalf of the girls, for fear of being labelled racist by the intensely powerful activists of the left. This indicates on-going baneful browbeating and denial of the problem. The local councillor for Newcastle’s West End where much of the crime took place, Dipu Ahad, told BBC TV news that his Muslim community did not need to be told how to behave, despite the pattern of convictions around the country, any more than white indigenous communities did since Jimmy Savile belonged to them. Trevor Phillips, former Equality Commission head, however said that it was time to admit that these ‘Asian’ gang convictions were in fact Muslim and that it was unfair to use the wider term ‘Asian’ as that tainted many other religious cultures not associated with the phenomenon.

Gus O’Donnell, former head of the UK Civil Service, on the BBC said these criminals were guilty of a deeply ‘racist’ crime in grooming and sexually abusing only young white girls as if trash with no human value. These crimes need to be prosecuted as racially aggravated, but are not.

Trevor Phillips and Lord O’Donnell are surely both right: there is clearly a deep cultural assumption felt by the convicted criminals in such cases that the victims belong to a lower species and are therefore fair game for grooming, drugging, raping and selling to others. And the convicts are Asian but religiously and culturally Muslim: in the Newcastle case Kurdish men were prominent in group rapes. It is way beyond time for experts in this religion to ask whether any aspect of their faith values play into contempt for such girls? Do they view infidel women of a lower order than their own?How does the concept of the ‘kaffir’, for example, affect these men?A theological inquiry now needs to be set in motion, free from the deferential attitude enforced by successive British governments.

 

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