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The Blindfold Briefing: Rape Gang Recommendations


At 218 pages, Rupert Lowe’s Rape Gang Inquiry Report (published in June 2026) has landed with a considerable virtual ‘thud’. The report is detailed, and the subject matter is extremely serious, but like all reports, it should be judged just as much by what it does not contain as by what it does. The first words of Lowe’s own Foreword contend that “Britain doesn’t have a racism problem, it has an immigration problem”. This may well be the right line to take, but not necessarily one reinforced by the report which follows.

The focus of this briefing will be limited to the recommendations made towards the end of the report because they represent the whole point of it. The focus of the report itself is much narrower than its title suggests, as it set out to deal with what is described as “the systematic targeting of vulnerable girls, overwhelmingly White British, by predominantly Muslim Pakistani gangs across towns and cities up and down the nation.” Presentation of the report as the result of a truly objective inquiry is undermined by the strong inference that it is the moral steadfastness of the native breed which “inspired over 20,000 British patriots to help fund our Rape Gang Inquiry”.

Whilst the Introduction tells the reader that the “Inquiry welcomed girls, boys, men, and women of all races and religions to testify” in order to “to gain a complete picture of the rape gang phenomenon,” the recommendations are not reflective of this. In the opening text of the Recommendations section, it is made perfectly clear that sympathy is to be curated: the issue to be redressed is the “profound betrayal of hundreds of thousands of British children”. Not just children, but British children, as distinct from ‘Muslim’ children or ‘Pakistani’ children.

The recommendation on prison sentences is founded on an absolutely solid base, which is that “current sentencing guidelines are grotesquely inadequate for organised child rape”. The report believes that “racial or religious motivation” should be considered as one of several “statutory aggravating factors that push sentences toward their maximum extent”. Are Rupert Lowe and the report authors unaware of just how wide the “racial and religious aggravation” net may be cast? The Crime and Disorder Act 1998 states that an offender must demonstrate hostility based on “the victim’s membership (or presumed membership) of a racial or religious group” and that hostility qualifies even if only “partly” based on such membership. The Act stipulates that membership “includes association with members of that group”. In other words, the threshold for the introduction of the element of supposed aggravation is extremely low.

Just a few paragraphs later, the report also states: “The Equality Act 2010, if not repealed altogether, should never be applied to criminal justice and safeguarding context”. Though the Equality Act follows the legislation on aggravation by some years, there is no doubt that the “protected characteristics” it enshrines have amplified the effect of the Crime and Disorder Act. As an aside, it should not be forgotten that the Crime and Disorder Act was passed during the first full year of the Blair tenure, which included 48 other general acts; the Human Rights Act is among them. As far as the report is concerned, this presents a contradiction of some magnitude, and only adds weight to the notion that the reader is supposed to go away with a very particular point of view. 

The Executive Summary has already stated: “Perpetrators from Pakistani Muslim and other Muslim backgrounds operated under an honour-and shame-based clan code that treated non-Muslim girls, especially white working class girls, as property available for sexual use”. First of all, this means that an enactment of these recommendations would see any abuse of a white girl by a Pakistani Muslim as racially or religiously aggravated, without further need of qualification. Also, based on the recommendations, a gang of white men would receive lesser sentences for abusing a white girl than a gang of Pakistani Muslims would for the same offence. It is not made clear how this would constitute ‘justice’ for the victim.

The sentencing paragraph closes with a call for the reintroduction of the death penalty, which is described as “more than proportionate”. The reader is reminded that Rupert Lowe has already called for this, which he has. In fact, he misrepresented data collected by a poll that he had commissioned, in order to claim that the British public agreed with his position. This, and the uncanny temporal proximity to parallel activity in the Israeli Knesset, was dealt with in ‘A Capital Coincidence’.

With regard to immigration, deportation, and denaturalisation, the line is clear: “Every foreign national convicted of group-based CSE must at the very least be deported”. There is no plan for this, and nor does there need to be; it is tossed out as a vote winner. It joins the list of jingoistic claims coming from the Restore stable, like the X post appearing to suggest that trained killers would be released to round up immigrants in “enforcement roles”; specifically, “field roles”. This was the declaration in April 2026 that military veterans will be recruited to conduct pogroms up and down the land. For those considering Rupert Lowe as an alternative to mainstream politics, it should be noted that ‘denaturalisation’ is a core tenet of the National Security Act 2023; one of the building blocks in the wall to contain ‘extremists’.



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