Newcastle grooming gang ‘may have had contact with Rochdale and Rotherham sex rings’ - sex ring
by:KISSTOY
2020-01-18
It has been claimed that the evil Newcastle gang of rape of children may be linked to other Asian beauty gangs, including Rotherham and Rochdale.
Young girls may even be traded like sex slaves at a sick party in northern England.
A source close to tyenside's investigation successfully sued 18 people this week.
Almost all people from Pakistan or Bangladesh
They told the Mirror that the way they plundered the victims was too similar to the most recent harrowing cases elsewhere.
"They all target young white girls for parties that take drugs and drink," said people familiar with the matter . ".
"The same is true of the gangs of Rotherham and Rochdale.
"I believe they must be connected via mobile phone or online.
"Some of these men may even come from Yorkshire to tyndside for sex parties.
"People will question why beauty gangs are free to mix up with other paedophiles hundreds of miles away.
According to a Rotherham whistleblower, there are gangs across the UK who rape children --
People are too afraid to be labeled racist to speak out, he said.
Jayne Senior told the Sun that he fought for 15 years to expose the horrors of Rotherham's sexual ring: "It's everywhere-Rotherham is not unique-we took a light on it.
"We 've always known that it's not just rotherum, it's going on, it's devastating.
"In a series of trials in Newcastle relating to sexual exploitation of children, a total of 18 persons were convicted or admitted to the crime.
The gang lured vulnerable girls to a "party" in the west end of the city where they drank alcohol and drugs and passed on from one man to another to have sex.
Jayne won the MBE award for her work in rotherum to bring twisted paedophile to justice, and she said recent cases have "shocked" her because more children don't
She said, "it's disturbing me --
How many lives have been destroyed?
"That's what we created because we didn't do anything.
The former child worker, who later wrote a book about her experience, called broken and betrayed, also attacked political correctness, claiming that it has helped to some extent create an environment in which sexual beasts can operate.
Shesaid in the Rotherham case: "It's a racial issue, obviously what we don't want to do is turn it into a racial issue," as she agreed, when signs of GFD were found, people are too nervous about the emergence of racism.
Yesterday, a Labor leader echoed Jayne's point of view.
Shadow women and equality minister and MP for Rotherham Sarah Champion said: "People are more afraid of being called racist than of making mistakes in declaring child abuse ".
Jayne told her how shocked she was to see a chilling reminder of what she had been trying to expose for more than a decade.
She said: "What are we actually doing to solve this problem?
This is one of the only truly serious crimes, and we will sit back and wait until there is evidence to step in.
"Why don't we take action when the risk exists?
"Do we have to wait for this abuse to happen so that we can intervene?
"This can happen to any child.
"Jayne first realized that the grooming gang was working in a youth project set up by the Rotherham Commission in 1997, which aims to work with girls and young women at risk of sexual exploitation.
Young girls will be involved in the project, telling terrible stories of abuse by some men-most of them Asian.
When she tried to alert the authorities to what she found, she was ignored until the situation reversed on 2014, and a report concluded, hundreds of girls in the town have been abused by a group of men mainly from Pakistan.
Jayne said: "It's a racial issue and it's clear that what we don't want to do is turn it into a racial issue.
"Jayne has been rated 2015 women of the year for work, and figures like restaurant owners say taxi drivers and shopkeepers can play a key role in finding signs of young people being abused on the street.
She agrees with Steve Ashman, chief of police in Northumbria, who said: "Individual communities should ask themselves if they are doing everything they can" to combat the rise of such gangs.
Jayne of the Newcastle gang said: "The evidence is already there and is already being established, and you just think about how many times we will actually do it and continue to ruin the lives of the children.
"We are constantly missing a chapter about [
There may be signs.
This is our community.
"Her views are supported by Sammy Woodhouse, a survivor of the Rotherham abuse incident, who has given up her right to remain anonymous.
On Wednesday, she said on Channel 4: "It's not just happening in rotherum, Rochdale, Newcastle, it's absolutely everywhere.
It's in the family, on the street, on the Internet.
"I think a lot needs to be done and it thinks it's going to last for generations and it's not until now that we start talking about it and put it at the front.
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