The Perfect Cover-Up?

How a Police Officer's Death Buried A Dark Rotherham Truth
Between 1997 and 2013, at least 1,400 little White girls were gang raped in Rotherham. Their abusers were almost all Pakistani men. This is not a far right conspiracy. This is fact.
The 2014 Jay report exposed how police, social services, and local authorities systematically failed to protect children. What happened in Rotherham is now accepted as one of Britain's worst child abuse scandals, where race relations and political allegiances were exposed as reasons for ignoring the industrial scale gang rape of children.
The Jay report was just the beginning. As Operation Stovewood, the massive criminal investigation that followed, began examining what went wrong, they uncovered something even more disturbing. It wasn't just incompetence. It was more than just a cover up. Police officers meant to protect these children were involved in the rape gangs.
Serving South Yorkshire Police officers faced allegations of collusion, assistance, and direct participation in sexual exploitation. Among them was PC Hassan Ali.
One victim reported that Ali had raped her, telling her:
"You do it for the other officer. So you're gonna do it for me."

There were other reports of little girls being raped in the back seats of police cars.
Ali never survived to face justice.
On January 22nd, 2015, the exact day he was eventually placed on restricted duties when a misconduct investigation was finally launched against him, Ali was struck by a car. He later died.
CCTV captured everything: the vehicle that struck Ali drifted out of its lane toward the centre of the road that Ali was part way across and also how the brakes were applied only after the collision.
At the subsequent trial, where the driver was acquitted, testimony confirmed Ali was his best friend's uncle. A coincidence.
When Ali eventually died, nine days later, South Yorkshire Police issued the following statement;
'PC Ali was a well-liked officer whose colleagues are devastated by what has happened.'
There was no reference to how he had been suspended. Nor was there any explanation as to why he had not been arrested, given the scale of the evidence against him. Not surprisingly perhaps, the misconduct case died with him.
For nearly a decade, the Independent Police Complaints Commission allowed the inquiry to collapse. No arrests were made. No investigation continued. Survivors' testimonies naming Ali were shelved. At least one other police officer involved was quietly allowed to retire.
Questions that should have been asked never were. Until now.
Was January 22nd, 2015 really just a coincidence? A tragic accident that conveniently allowed the police to bury a case of a Pakistani police officer accused of being involved in the gang rape of little girls?
I make no allegations. I only set out the information that I have been able to piece together regarding Ali. I also have questions of my own.
I've never seen anything like it. I leave to you to make your own minds up. Look out for the special live broadcast.
I am Raja Miah. For six years, I led a small team that exposed how politicians protected the rape gangs.
During this time, Labour politicians tried everything possible to stop me. I spent 3 years on bail as case after case they fabricated against me collapsed in court. My mother died before I was able to clear my name.
Now the truth is out. In detail. The Pakistani Rape Gangs are real. And their victims, little White girls, number in the hundreds of thousands.
So now the question is: will you stand with me and help make sure the National Inquiry we have all fought for is not a whitewash?
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There will not be another.
- Raja Miah MBE