Grooming Gangs Crisis in UK Spans All Communities, Races and Faiths, Says Jemima

Jemima says the grooming gangs crisis in the UK spans all communities, races, and faiths, highlighting the widespread nature of the abuse.

Stressing that Grooming Gangs crisis was a broader issue of men abusing power and not specific to any community, British screenwriter Jemima Goldsmith, ex-wife of jailed ex-prime minister Imran Khan, issued a stark warning on Wednesday over rampant child sexual abuse also known as grooming in the UK.

In a recent post on X, Goldsmith, said, “Sexual abuse in the UK sadly spans all communities, socioeconomic backgrounds, races and faiths.”

Jemima’s remarks on one of the most pressing issues affecting young girls and boys came a day after the Foreign Office of Pakistan categorically condemned grooming allegations levelled against the Pakistani diaspora in the UK.

Grooming crisis: Sexual abuse in UK spans all communities, races, faiths, says Jemima

Responding to a recent spate of “xenophobic remarks”, the FO on Monday expressed deep concern over the increasingly racist and Islamophobic political and media commentary towards the Pakistani community in the UK.

“Pakistan-UK friendship is characterised by warmth, cordiality, robust cooperation and trust. Nurtured over decades this relationship remains an important priority of Pakistan’s foreign policy,” the FO said in a statement.

The statement came after tech billionaire Elon Musk, who owns microblogging website X, waded into the debate surrounding the term “Asian grooming gangs,” which sparked fears of reinforcing negative stereotypes about Pakistanis.

Also See: Elon Musk’s Grooming Gangs Debate: Is There More Than Meets the Eye

She also shared statistics on abuse cases involving the Catholic Church in England and Wales, British boarding schools, and British Asian grooming gangs.

“The Catholic Church in England and Wales (1970–2015): 3,000 instances of child sexual abuse, 936 alleged paedophiles, 133 convictions 52 priests defrocked. Since 2016, there have been more than 100 reported sexual abuse allegations each year,” the ex-spouse of the cricketer-turned-politician wrote in the X post.

“UK Boarding schools (2012–2018): Thousands of alleged victims over decades; 425 accused paedophiles, 160 charged since 2012 alone. 171 of these allegations pertained to historical abuse of children, and at least 125 involved recent incidents.

“UK Asian grooming gangs (1997–2013): at least 1,400 victims, 60 child rapists convicted so far.

“The exact number of victims for all the above is unclear, as cases so often go unreported for years.

“And there have been multiple failures to prosecute perpetrators & protect victims),” Jemina wrote in a footnote at the bottom of the post.

Replying to an X-user, she said, “The common thread here is men, (often from closed, hierarchical, gender-segregated communities), abusing their power.”

Grooming crisis: Sexual abuse in UK spans all communities, races, faiths, says Jemima

The provocative posts from Musk also prompted a response from the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) earlier this month, stating that the vast majority of sexual grooming gang offences are carried out by white men.

Richard Fewkes, the director of the NPCC’s Hydrant programme targeting child sexual abuse, said: “There is no significant issue with any particular ethnicity or setting.”

Fewkes’s comments come after Musk used his social media platform X to wage an online campaign against the UK government over the grooming gangs crisis, making hideously false allegations against Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who had ensured that the grooming gangs are prosecuted and punished for their crimes when he was the head of Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) at the height of this scandal involving Pakistanis, Asians, and White men.

Previously, the billionaire also falsely accused the British prime minister of being “complicit in the rape of Britain” over his record as a former director of public prosecutions, and called safeguarding minister Jess Phillips a “witch” and a “rape genocide apologist”.

Source: Geo News, Pakistan.

SAT Web Administrator

Recent

Blood and Gold: How Sudan’s War Became the World’s Greatest Human Rights Failure:

Blood and Gold: How Sudan’s War Became the World’s Greatest Human Rights Failure

Sudan’s war is not misunderstood, it is deliberately ignored. Fuelled by a gold economy tied to foreign profiteers, the conflict has dismantled the country while the world watches in silence. As the RSF and SAF wage a war built on extraction and exploitation, millions are displaced, starved, and erased from global concern. Sudan’s suffering exposes a deeper truth: human rights protections collapse where profit thrives and African lives remain invisible.

Read More »
The New Bollywood

The New Bollywood

Bollywood, once India’s most effective soft-power tool, is undergoing a dramatic ideological overhaul. Films like Dhurandhar and The Taj Story reflect a new cinematic nationalism rooted in historical revisionism, internal othering, and aggressive anti-Pakistan narratives, reshaping both India’s identity and its global cultural reach.

Read More »
Afghanistan’s Trade Boycott: Strategic Miscalculation With Fiscal Consequences

Afghanistan’s Trade Boycott: Strategic Miscalculation With Fiscal Consequences

Afghanistan’s 2025 trade boycott of Pakistan exposes a strategic miscalculation. Despite efforts to shift toward Iran and Central Asia, Kabul remains structurally dependent on Pakistan’s mature trade corridors, customs revenue, labour mobility, and logistical efficiency. Alternative routes carry higher costs, sanctions risks, and operational delays, leaving the Taliban with mounting fiscal losses and regional constraints.

Read More »
The Defund Taliban Campaign

The Defund Taliban Campaign

The Defund Taliban Campaign examines how indirect US funding and a $7 billion abandoned arsenal have turned the Taliban into a regional force multiplier for militant groups.

Read More »
The Taliban’s new fatwa banning foreign militancy signals a shift in doctrine, but rising regional attacks and ideological fractures raise questions about its enforceability.

Doctrine vs Reality: Can the Taliban Enforce Their Ban on Foreign Militants?

The Taliban’s new fatwa banning foreign militants has been hailed by officials in Kabul as a decisive theological shift. But rising attacks in the north, continued TTP operations, and mounting pressure from Washington expose a widening gap between doctrine and reality. As regional powers demand proof of enforcement, the decree risks becoming another symbolic gesture unless it translates into measurable action on the ground.

Read More »