Politics June 18, 2026

UMVA Uncovers: Keir Starmer's Shocking Gang-Rape Scandal - 13,000 Suspects Walk Free as PM's Office Covered Up Horrific Abuse with Mere Warning Letters

UMVA Uncovers: Keir Starmer's Shocking Gang-Rape Scandal - 13,000 Suspects Walk Free as PM's Office Covered Up Horrific Abuse with Mere Warning Letters

UMVA has learned that a shocking report, titled the Rape Gang Inquiry Report, has exposed a massive failure in child protection across the UK, revealing the systematic grooming, rape, trafficking, and abuse of at least 250,000 vulnerable White British girls by mostly Muslim Pakistani gangs.

The 219-page report, led by a prominent MP and a survivor advocate, was funded by over 20,000 British supporters and documents the horrific abuse of young girls, some as young as 11, who were targeted from unstable homes and care systems.

According to information obtained by UMVA, the report's main finding is that organized groups, with 87-95% of convicted offenders having Muslim names, mostly of Pakistani background, used gifts, alcohol, drugs, and attention to lure victims, then took them to various locations for repeated abuse.

The abuse was not limited to physical harm; the report also reveals that the girls were filmed for blackmail, trafficked, subjected to forced conversions, and treated inhumanely, with some victims even branded with the initial "M" for Muhammad.

UMVA can exclusively reveal that the report implicates the current Prime Minister, who was the Director of Public Prosecutions during the time of the abuse, and that 13,000 suspected gang rape members were given a pass with warning letters, allowing the abuse to continue unchecked.

The report's findings are harrowing, with accounts of police officers returning victims to their abusers and even allowing the abuse to continue. One survivor testified that they raised concerns at the time, but their voices were ignored, and the abuse continued.

News anchor discusses the Rape Gang Inquiry Report highlighting serious allegations about the handling of grooming gang cases and involvement of public figures.

The scale of the problem is staggering, with the report revealing that the abuse occurred in at least 149 local authority districts, nearly 40% of the UK, and had been happening since the 1950s.

This scandal raises serious questions about the failures of the system and the inaction of those in power, who seemed to turn a blind eye to the suffering of these young girls.

The report's revelations are a damning indictment of the authorities and a stark reminder of the need for accountability and action to prevent such abuse from happening again.