Starmer Covered Up Grooming Gangs
The MP at the centre of the Government cover-up with all the evidence exposed in documents.
JAOC is joining blogger and journalist Raja Miah calling for the arrest and prosecution of
Jim McMahon Labour MP for Oldham West







Keir Starmer when at the DPP
The systematic grooming and sexual assault of thousands of English girls by predominantly Pakistani Muslim men over several decades represents the most significant peacetime crime in modern European history. This abuse persisted for many years and continues to this day, with the vast majority of victims still lacking justice.
Both Conservative and Labour governments in the UK believed they had effectively suppressed the narrative following a few high-profile prosecutions in the 2010s. It seemed they had succeeded—until Elon Musk reviewed some court documents and expressed his shock and confusion on X during the New Year.
Britain now faces global condemnation. The public's repressed anger is rising, manifesting in petitions, calls for a public inquiry, and demands for accountability.
Grooming Gangs Taskforce arrests hundreds in first year - GOV.UK
Elon Musk on X: "For anyone doubting the severity and depravity of the mass gang rapes of little girls in Britain, go to the source material and read the court transcripts. I did. It is worse than you could possibly imagine. https://t.co/OeK2uVxJ93" / X
This scandal is already altering the landscape of British politics. It is not only about the horrific nature of the crimes but also about the involvement of every level of the British system in the cover-up.
How the grooming gangs scandal was covered up
Police 'took part in Rotherham child sex abuse and ignored pleas from victims' | Daily Mail Online
Social workers were coerced into silence. Local law enforcement turned a blind eye, justified, and even supported paedophile rapists in numerous cities. High-ranking police and Home Office officials intentionally refrained from taking action, prioritising what they referred to as “community relations.” Local council members and Members of Parliament dismissed urgent requests for assistance from the parents of victimised children. Charities, NGOs, and Labour MPs labelled those who spoke out about the scandal as racists and Islamophobes. The media largely overlooked or minimised what should have been the most significant story of their careers. In their lack of curiosity, much of the British media elite remained entrenched in the insular world of Westminster politics and its self-serving agendas.
This behaviour was motivated by a desire to protect a failing model of multiculturalism and to evade difficult inquiries regarding shortcomings in immigration policy and integration. They acted out of fear of being labelled as racist or Islamophobic. Additionally, Britain’s longstanding class prejudices merged with a new form of political correctness.
The exact number of young girls who have been raped in various towns across Britain since the 1970s remains unknown. However, it is clear that the most affected areas were the postindustrial mill towns in northern England and the Midlands, where immigrants from Pakistan and Bangladesh began to settle in the 1960s. Local residents report that incidents of grooming and sexual assault started shortly thereafter. In Rotherham, the Yorkshire city where the scandal first emerged, authorities were alerted to ongoing grooming and sexual abuse by 2001. Yet, the first convictions did not occur until 2010, when five men of Pakistani descent were sentenced for multiple offenses against girls as young as 12.
Rotherham child abuse: The background to the scandal - BBC News
These perpetrators specifically targeted the most vulnerable girls—those who were impoverished, fatherless, or living in care homes—luring them with sweets, food, taxi rides, and drugs. They exploited these girls, passing them among family and friends, trafficking them to similar networks in other cities, and ultimately discarding them once they reached the age of consent.
This disturbing pattern was replicated in as many as 50 cities nationwide, including affluent Oxford and progressive Bristol. A 2014 inquiry estimated that 1,400 girls had been victims of serial rape in Rotherham alone.
The grim realities of these cases are well-documented in the limited number of prosecutions that reached the courts. The accounts detailed in court documents are harrowing: the girls were drugged, beaten, sodomised, gang-raped, trafficked, and subjected to torture.
For instance, in Oldham in 2006, a 12-year-old girl referred to as “Sophie” entered a police station to report that she had been assaulted in a graveyard by a man named “Ali.” A desk officer advised her to return with an adult when she was sober. Shortly after, two men approached her in the station, and with a third accomplice, they raped her in their vehicle. After being abandoned on the street, she sought help from a man named Sarwar Ali, who took her to his home, raped her, and then gave her money for bus fare.
Horrifying story of ‘Sophie’ a 12-year-old abused girl failed by Oldham police | The Oldham Times
In Telford, Azhar Ali Mehmood began grooming Lucy Lowe when she was just 12 years old and impregnated her by the age of 14. Tragically, he later set her home ablaze, killing her, her mother, her disabled sister, and her unborn second child, who was also his. In 2001, Mehmood was sentenced to life in prison for murder, but not for the sexual crimes he committed.
Telford taxi driver who murdered family in fire refused parole again - BBC News
Lucy Lowe: Telford victim's daughter 'wants answers' - BBC News
In an era marked by the “Say Her Name” movement, the names of these girls went largely unrecognised by those in power. Their abusers labelled them as “white slags,” deeming them worthless and disposable. Aside from a handful of whistleblowers, predominantly women, and brave journalists like Julie Bindel, Andrew Norfolk, Douglas Murray, and Charlie Peters, the media largely ignored the issue.
Rotherham child sex scandal: Andrew Norfolk on how he broke the story | The Times | The Guardian
Why was I the only reporter? | Charlie Peters | The Critic Magazine
Why was this the case? It was perceived as the wrong type of racially motivated crime, perpetrated by the wrong type of offender.
Most of the victims were white, with some being Sikh, while the majority of their abusers were of Pakistani and Bangladeshi Muslim descent. Many of these crimes occurred in cities governed by Labour Party councils, where local MPs relied on Muslim votes. This situation fostered a form of institutional racism that allowed the offenders to act with impunity.
The system itself became compromised. Welfare workers have acknowledged that they hesitated to report crimes due to fears of being labelled as racist by the police. One leader of a rape gang in Oldham, Shabir Ahmed, was employed by the local council as a “welfare rights officer” and operated his gang from the council's welfare office. Another gang member was part of the Oldham Youth Council.
X
In several instances, local Labour politicians of Pakistani descent intervened in police investigations. In Telford in 2016, ten Labour council members wrote to the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, from the Conservative Party, asserting that the allegations of abuse were “sensationalised” and that no action was necessary. However, two years later, an investigation by the Sunday Mirror revealed around 1,000 victims. The superintendent of the West Mercia regional police strongly contested these figures, stating that they were inaccurate.
Telford abuse: Victim numbers 'sensationalised' says police chief - BBC News
Starmer showcasing his time with the CPS
In 2009, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), under the leadership of Keir Starmer, decided not to pursue charges against a grooming and rape gang in Rochdale, despite possessing DNA evidence and extensive video testimonies. When Nazir Afzal began his role as a Crown prosecutor in 2011, one of his initial steps was to revisit the case and overturn the CPS's earlier decision. By 2012, Afzal had successfully secured convictions for nine men, eight of whom were of Pakistani descent and one of Afghan descent.
Please see below tweets:
X
Following these events, Afzal remarked that the "overly sensitive approach of white professionals towards political correctness and their fear of being perceived as racist may have hindered the pursuit of justice."
Labour blocks grooming gang inquiry into Starmer’s conduct as CPS head
Grooming gang review kept secret as Home Office claims releasing findings ‘not in public interest’ | The Independent | The Independent
Starmer acknowledged that "in cases involving groups, there is undoubtedly an ethnic dimension that must be recognised and addressed." However, he maintained that the failure to prosecute stemmed from "a lack of understanding" regarding the victims, which he described as a "credibility issue." This is laughable if not so serious!
Rochdale child sex grooming case originally dropped - BBC News
Rochdale grooming trial: Nine men jailed - BBC News
Nazir Afzal: how the CPS plans to bring more child abusers to justice | Child protection | The Guardian
Currently, it is Starmer who faces questions about his credibility. Maggie Oliver, the detective from Manchester who played a key role in uncovering the abuse in Rochdale, asserts that Starmer is "as culpable as anyone I know" for the systemic failure to safeguard some of the most vulnerable children in Britain.
How Starmer was forced to admit CPS let down child victims of grooming gangs
Starmer ‘guilty as anyone I know’, says grooming gang whistleblower Maggie Oliver
Starmer has not yet confronted the Labour Party's historical involvement in this situation, nor has he addressed his own record of complicity. He has not clarified whether he supports his colleague Jess Phillips's stance against a national inquiry. However, with Musk having voiced the unspoken truths about the situation, there is no turning back.
Starmer's legalistic responses appear to be what they are: an attempt to protect the parties interests at the cost of justice for the victims. Simply announcing another inquiry will not suffice to appease the British public, nor will it diminish the appeal of Nigel Farage and his Reform UK party. Their primary attraction lies in their willingness to articulate what others shy away from: that the entire British system has become morally bankrupt. Ironically, Musk's suggestion for Farage to resign—claiming that Farage "lacks the necessary qualities"—may inadvertently relieve some of the pressure on Starmer.
Read Musks comment on X
x.com/elonmusk/status/1875904634419859928
JAOC COMMENT
There should be no doubt regarding Starmer's guilt, as I have previously detailed. It is essential to recognise that he is involved and is obscuring the truth with a web of deception and falsehoods.
For the record, I do not identify as a racist or right-wing, but it is impossible to overlook the actions of this individual, who seems to lie at every opportunity and possesses as much integrity and morality as Jack the Ripper.
If I face imprisonment for expressing what many are thinking, I can no longer remain neutral about someone who makes me uncomfortable every time he speaks. All I can hear are the cries of children suffering abuse while he continues to act as an irresponsible, untrustworthy, and erratic leader unfit to govern, let alone manage his own affairs. He expects us to comply while he enriches himself with the financial support of the wealthy. Make no mistake, he poses a threat not only to us but also to his own children, and I have no doubt he would allow Prince Andrew to take on a caregiving role and think nothing of it.
It is time to be an Outlaw when good men do bad things as i am sure im not alone in making it heard its time to take our country back before it is too late. Guy Fawkes was both misunderstood and before his time.