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I dont know why i wrote this thread. I felt nauseous while writing it but may Allah,s wrath be upon those who did such horrible things. You can assume things that i had some motive behind written it .. but for your disappointment i didn’t. I am not here...

114,667 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

21 Comments

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

This isn’t limited to the UK either. Similar patterns have emerged in other European countries. The scale and systematic nature of these crimes suggest that it’s not just a localized issue but part of a much larger problem tied to extremist ideologies. Muslims who feel defensive about this term need to self-reflect and engage in community conversations. Ask tough questions: Why do these individuals believe such ideologies? What steps can we take to counter them? Silence isn’t an option anymore. 14/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

UAE placed 19 individuals and entities on its Local Terrorist List for terrorist organization Muslim Brotherhood affiliation. EIGHT of the entities are based in the United Kingdom. The UAE is sanctioning entities in the UK, let that sink in. 15/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

Everyone of those Pakistani, Afghani and Bangladeshi men should be deported, and blacklisted - along with all their contact list thoroughly investigated and if any found receive the same treatment or should be given a death penalty. Most of these people are on asylum or illegal immigrants . They have abandoned pakistan ,and refused to intergerate into western culture . They have their one leg in Pakistan and one in uk and causinh chaos in both . There should be a new taskforce established, a better one, with powers to take immediate action and resolve this epidemic of these monsters. 15/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

Non-Muslims should stop mollycoddling Muslims over this issue. Political correctness doesn’t help victims. Naming the problem and addressing its ideological roots is the only way forward. And no, this isn’t about painting an entire community with the same brush. Many Muslims are horrified by these crimes. But deflection or denial only enables perpetrators and gives extremists a free pass to continue their exploitation. 16/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

In some cases, the offenders held deep-rooted misogyny, seeing women (especially non-Muslim women) as objects. This toxic mix of cultural and ideological supremacy must be confronted head-on. In Pakistan such events never happened because it was never allowed . 17/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

Pakistanis make up just 2% of the UK population, yet: - 6% of British doctors are Pakistani. - 8% of junior doctors and nurses are Pakistani. 20% of small & medium enterprises (SMEs) are owned by South Asians, many Pakistani-led. The British Pakistani community contributes £1+ billion annually to the UK economy. Proportional to their population, 2% of all sexual violence in the U.K. is carried out by Pakistanis. Jail them. Hang them. Do whatever with them, as long as it is consistently applied to all offenders of all backgrounds. 18/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

We disown this trash. And we will not be known by them. The grooming gang from a decade ago represents all 2 Billion Muslims and everyone than the rapes in churches? represents Christianity. The widely circulated claim that "80% of grooming cases are Asians" is based on just 120 cases over 12 years. 18/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

Tommy Robinson is not in prison for ANYTHING to do with a grooming gang. He is in prison for defaming a CHILD victim of abuse. He was ordered by the court NOT to do it again. He then did it TEN TIMES. He had 10 chances. He broke the court order. He broke the law. All of Tommy Robinson’s friends are pedøphiIes. 19/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

So, what’s the takeaway? This is a multilayered problem ideological, cultural, and systemic. It demands accountability from communities, law enforcement, and policymakers. Protecting vulnerable children must override all fears of political backlash. The victims of these grooming gangs deserve justice. They were failed by their families, communities, and systems. Their stories must be heard, their pain acknowledged, and their abusers brought to justice without exceptions. 20/

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

In March 2000, a secret deal was cut. It was arranged between a child rapist and police officers. An abused girl was handed over to the police by her abuser. In return, he was allowed to go free. Jahanghir Akhtar, who later became deputy head of the council, was accused of facilitating the deal. He denied it. The abuser was his cousin, Arshid Hussain, a notorious gangster. Foreign systems of prioritising distant family kinship over justice causing a crisis? In South Yorkshire? Hassan Ali, the policeman who helped arrange the secret deal, was run over and killed by a car on the day he was told he was under investigation. With his death, there was no further inquiry. 21 /

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

Mr bean is a british Pakistani and been very vocal against these scumbags . Alot of the community is condemning and askinh for justice except a few grifters. You might not see the much of them on sm because the number is very small .

Leo Orchard's profile picture
Leo Orchard1 year ago

I deeply appreciate the time you put into this, it feels like you mean it all, 1 or 2 errors aside it is clearly from the heart. We DONT hate you all, we hate THEM and what they have DONE We want nothing more than for you to stand with us I would urge you to look more into TR tho

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

Thank u so much for seeinh the intent.. i had no intention of giving clean chit to anyone but just to call spade a spade and blame those who are responsible for a quick justice . When you blame irrelevant people along thn it gets harder for victims to get a quick justice.

Parroted Words's profile picture
Parroted Words1 year ago

If the fear of Yahweh is the beginning of wisdom, then what is its end? Cut through the abundant nonsense, empty platitudes, and conventional musings of the world and get straight to the heart of what it means to be wise.

Ashutosh Kumar's profile picture
Ashutosh Kumar1 year ago

When the 'Pakistani-Muslims' gangs have been caught for these heinous crimes, people like you start spinning stories "race/religion has nothing to do with it" and "allah's wrath on all who do this" and "oh, but Pakistanis contribute so much to economy" (such a laughable claim) - too late for this hogwash, and everyone knows the reality - this has been happening for a long time but people like you and the left media choose to not look at it, same way it ignores the Islamic terrorism ("oh, but religion has nothing to do with terrorism" ) - I hope one day you'll write a similar thread on terrorism

Ram's profile picture
Ram1 year ago

India is no different. Millions of Hindus girls have been raped and abused by such Muslim grooming gangs. Wherever there are Muslims, problems will be there. Most of the Muslims support such grooming gangs.

Shawna Clawson Chambers's profile picture
Shawna Clawson Chambers1 year ago

Question: if the Pakistani community knew that this was going on and that "racism" was being used as a shield, why didn't the community police itself? I know here in the US (and forgive me for the clumsy analogy) gangs, whether they sell drugs or guns or sex, have pretty ruthless forms of policing themselves totally separate from any law enforcement. They terrorize their communities at large and don't hesitate to make examples of anyone who might go to law enforcement for assistance in order to intimidate the community into silence. Yet there are people who come forward. So why didn't anyone in the Pakistani community? Or did they try early on and the police made it clear that they didn't care? I've known a lot of Pakistanis, Indians and a few Afghans and sure, a couple were creepy (one approached my dad about an arranged marriage when I was 13-14) but I don't recall any of them when I was a young teenager being inappropriate; even the marriage wasn't actually going to be a meeting with the man until I was 16. I just can't imagine any of the people I've known who wouldn't have acted on their own if the police wouldn't do anything. Is there really such a difference between the Pakistani community in the US and the one in the UK?

MASTER's profile picture
MASTER1 year ago

You wrapped it up pretty well, but at one point you said its ideological which its actually not, it has nothing to do with fundamentalists, and yes calling a spade a spade is not wrong.

Hafsa H Malik's profile picture
Hafsa H Malik1 year ago

Thanks im also not perfct.. i mean im also learning.

Arjun Ram's profile picture
Arjun Ram1 year ago

Madam, highly appreciate your honesty and truthfulness. But as long as Muslims, normal or radical, believe Allah is the only God, and all others that don’t call God as Allah go to hell, all Kafirs are inferiors, sinners & objects. You will never see slow down in these atrocities

StrangerThenRedz's profile picture
StrangerThenRedz1 year ago

Yes you had a motivation for this racist clown islamaphobe, generalising everything well, one guy did this so they all did this, I geuss if a white rapist did one thing does that mean all white rapists did that?, then you go on to link it to islam and muslim brotherhood cos one rapist used the word "fair game", these people won't get generalised by you though

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