A bombshell new report released by Restore Britain, led by Member of Parliament Rupert Lowe, alleges that at least 250,000 British girls have been subjected to rape, trafficking, torture, and sexual exploitation by organized migrant rape gangs over the past several decades.
The 218-page report describes the scandal as one of the greatest institutional failures in modern British history — and paints a devastating picture of systematic abuse stretching back 50 years and accuses politicians, police, social services, schools, healthcare providers, and local authorities of repeatedly failing to protect vulnerable children.
“The evidence put to the Inquiry confirms that this scandal constitutes one of the most horrendous failures in the history of the country,” the report states.
The Rape Gang Inquiry Report.https://t.co/EuKgGWBRhS pic.twitter.com/SD5G9HPVtV
— Rupert Lowe MP (@RupertLowe10) June 16, 2026
According to the inquiry, vulnerable girls, often preteens — overwhelmingly white and from working-class backgrounds — were targeted by organized networks operating across towns and cities throughout the United Kingdom. Victims were allegedly groomed with gifts, alcohol, drugs, and attention before being transported to houses, hotels, restaurants, and apartments where they were repeatedly raped by groups of adult men.
When asked how many men had abused her, one victim, identified only as Chloe in the report, responded, “Hundreds. Hundreds and hundreds and hundreds.”
The report alleges that victims were trafficked between cities, filmed for blackmail, forced into abortions, and in some cases subjected to forced pregnancy, religious conversion, marriage, and overseas trafficking. There were also cases of girls as young as 13 being admitted to sexual health clinics with cases of Chlamydia, Gonorrhea, and Genital Warts.
Restore Britain argues that the true scale of the abuse remains unknown but cites previous estimates suggesting at least 250,000 girls may have been victimized nationwide. The figure stems from extrapolations based on major inquiries conducted in places such as Rotherham and Telford. However, the report adds that “the scale, nature, and characteristics of group-based child sexual exploitation remain impossible to quantify precisely due to inconsistent data collection and historical suppression.”
The inquiry claims it identified evidence of grooming gang activity in at least 149 local authority districts across Britain.
One of the report’s most damning conclusions concerns the ethnic and religious background of offenders. Citing court records, previous inquiries, and witness testimony, the report argues that a disproportionate number of perpetrators came from Pakistani Muslim backgrounds.
The report points to previous analyses suggesting that approximately 87% of those convicted in major group-based child sexual exploitation cases carried distinctively Muslim names. It further argues that authorities were often reluctant to confront the issue directly out of fear of accusations of racism or concerns about community relations.
“Political correctness, fear of accusations of racism, and fear of losing electoral support from certain demographics have taken precedence over the protection of British children,” the report states. The inquiry reserves some of its harshest criticism for government institutions.
According to the report, police frequently ignored complaints, failed to pursue known offenders, and in some cases treated victims themselves as criminals. Social workers allegedly dismissed concerns raised by parents and whistleblowers, while schools and healthcare providers failed to intervene despite obvious warning signs.
The report also accuses successive governments of avoiding a full accounting of the scandal. While the Labour Party receives particular criticism for resisting deeper investigations, the report argues that Conservative governments also failed to pursue meaningful reforms despite years of mounting evidence.
The publication comes amid renewed national debate over grooming gangs following the release of Baroness Louise Casey’s government-backed review, which concluded that authorities had often failed to properly collect ethnicity data and had been reluctant to investigate patterns that could inflame racial tensions.
Restore Britain is calling for a series of sweeping reforms, including tougher sentencing, expanded deportation powers for foreign offenders, mandatory ethnicity recording, institutional accountability measures, and a comprehensive review of past cases.
The organization also says it intends to publish additional witness testimony and pursue legal action against individuals and institutions it believes helped enable the abuse.
For many Britons, however, the report’s most disturbing conclusion is not merely the scale of the crimes themselves but the allegation that authorities knew what was happening for years and repeatedly failed to act.
If the report’s findings are accurate, the scandal represents not simply a criminal failure, but a profound failure of Britain’s political and governing institutions to protect some of the country’s most vulnerable children.

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