By Ian Jobling • 6/3/08
There’s a wonderful, detailed post on the blog TottenhamLad about gang-rapes perpetrated by minorities, mostly blacks, in Britain. The blogger cites dozens of incidents like the following that have occurred in the past few years:
A schoolgirl was raped by a gang who poured caustic soda over her body to destroy DNA evidence … the gang [said to have been five black youths] beat the teenager before taking turns to rape her in an empty house in Tottenham… Doctors feared the girl would die but she pulled through and is now stable in a burns unit … a police source said: “She has appalling injuries from which she will never fully recover…”
TottenhamLad then reviews the statistical evidence on his subject:
The hearty lad also makes a credible case that British news organizations conceal the race of the perpetrators in stories of crime committed by non-whites, a practice that has already been noted on The Inverted World. For example, in a news story on a gang-rape:
the BBC emphasized the fact, complete with a large leading photographic image, that a, presumably English, girl had been convicted of rape:
“A teenage girl who pinned a woman to the ground during a “vile and horrifying” sex attack has been found guilty of rape.”
Though reading the full story shows that her part, as one of a fourteen strong gang, consisted only of ‘pinning’ the victim down; while the two men who actually committed the rape were black.
There are even clearer examples of the suppression of stories of crime committed by non-whites:
Suspicions that the media are ignoring some of the more uncomfortable aspects of inter-racial crime are also not helped by the infamous case of the Channel 4 documentary that was pulled from the schedules because of its topic: the targeting of very young English children by Indian and Pakistani immigrant paedophilic gang-rapists.
The documentary was to have reported “that white [English] girls as young as 11 were being sexually abused … raped and gang raped … by Asian men who encouraged their dependency on drugs over a period of time.”
But was deemed unsuitable for broadcast because, “Channel 4 said police feared the new documentary “would increase community tensions in Bradford” … “with the risk that it would lead to public disorder.”
The blogger cites statistics on interracial crime in America from the report I wrote while at New Century Foundation, The Color of Crime, and uses the report’s methodology in his own study of British gang-rapes. I appreciate his close reading of the report’s often challenging methodological footnotes.