Looks like some of the Pakastani men-folk missed the multiculturalism classes. It also appears that the Telegraph has taken spin classes from the New York Times and it worked initially at first, because I thought this was a new story. After reading it though I discovered it was just a re-branded story. I really like the way the headline implies Asian instead of Pakastanian ( I know Pakastanians are Asian but the common person would automatically assume Asian to be Japanese, Thai, Chinese ) I am led to believe this headline was presented this way to hopefully prevent a possible public outrage because they were Pakastani and in light of the recent beheading by a militant raised in the UK. I think the same thing goes on over here by our American media groups in an effort to conceal just how corrupted our country has become and the actual numbers of illegals siphoning our social services coffers.
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By Martin Evans, and Gordon Rayner
9:04PM BST 26 Aug 2014
When in 2010 five Asian men from Rotherham were jailed for grooming teenage girls for sex, it was regarded as a feather in the cap for South Yorkshire Police and the local social services which had doggedly pursued the prosecution. Sentencing Adil Hussain, Razwan Razaq, Mohsin Khan, Umar Razaq, and Zafran Ramzan, the judge described them as “dangerous sexual predators” and said Rotherham would be a safer place for youngsters with them off the streets. But Tuesday’s damning report into sexual exploitation in the South Yorkshire town revealed in stark and horrifying detail how their appalling crimes were merely the tip of the iceberg. For at least 16-years gangs of mainly Asian men were able to target, groom and abuse girls as young as 11, with little to fear from the authorities. In her 153 page report, Professor Alexis Jay, the former chief inspector of social work in Scotland, catalogued a series of appalling incidents in which children were gang raped, beaten, threated and then dismissed and ignored by those who ought to have been protecting them
Issues of ethnicity In Rotherham the "majority" of known perpetrators were of Pakistani heritage, the report says, which led to police and council workers "tiptoeing" around the problem.
In the council and the police there was a perception among staff that they should "downplay the ethnic dimensions of child sexual exploitation".
Frontline staff became confused as to what they were supposed to say and do and what would be interpreted as "racist".
Prof Jay adds: "From a political perspective, the approach of avoiding public discussion of the issues was ill judged."
Other than two meetings in 2011, there was no direct engagement with the Pakistani community about the issue of child sexual exploitation, despite "strong concern" from community leaders that there should be.
One of the local Pakistani women's groups described how Pakistani-heritage girls were targeted by taxi drivers and on occasion by older men lying in wait outside school gates at dinner times and after school.
They also cited cases in Rotherham where Pakistani landlords had befriended Pakistani women and girls on their own for purposes of sex, then passed on their name to other men who had then contacted them for sex.
The women and girls feared reporting such incidents to the Police because it would affect their future marriage prospects.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/11057622/Rotherham-child-sexual-exploitation-Victims-raped-beaten-and-doused-in-petrol-if-they-threatened-to-tell.html