Order Robert Spencer’s new book, Holy Hell: Islam’s Abuse of Women and the Infidels Who Enable It: HERE.
It was, and is, a national self-immolation unparalleled in human history.
As British authorities stood by and watched, Muslim migrants, primarily from Pakistan, victimized young British girls on a truly staggering scale. For decades, clearly without fear of arrest or prosecution, these Muslim migrant gangs terrorized and raped tens of thousands of girls, often forcing them to engage in prostitution. The true number of victims may never be known, given the timidity, lassitude, and sympathy with the perpetrators that British authorities repeatedly displayed, but some have estimated that it could be as high as over a million British girls.
There is no end to the horror stories, and many were widely reported, only to be received with indifference and inaction.
The Daily Mail in December 2011 published the story of one seventeen-year-old girl, Laura Wilson, who was “groomed for sex by a string of British Pakistani men,” and was eventually “stabbed and thrown into a canal to die after she brought ‘shame’ on an Asian family.” “Asian” is the British media’s favored euphemism for Pakistani Muslim.
An eighteen-year-old Muslim, Ashtiaq Asghar, “repeatedly knifed” Wilson “then pushed her into the water, using the point of the knife to force her head below the surface as she fought to stay alive.” She was not successful.
Asghar murdered her because he was “furious after the young mother revealed details of their sexual relationship to his Muslim family and was on ‘a mission to kill.’” Asghar explained his perspective and motivations in a series of texts to his friend Ishaq Hussain, who had also had sexual relations with Laura Wilson. Asghar likely knew that Hussain would be sympathetic because, in the words of Lord Justice Davis when he tried Asghar for the murder of Laura Wilson, Hussain “seems to have regarded girls, white girls, simply as sexual targets. He does not treat them as human beings at all. You got into that mindset yourself.”
Davis framed the contempt Asghar and Hussain had for Laura Wilson in racial terms, but it had a religious component as well. The day before he murdered Laura Wilson, Asghar told Hussain: “I’m gonna send that kuffar (non-Muslim) bitch straight to Hell.” He also wrote to Hussain: “I need to do a mission,” and added that he was “making some beans on toast,” a euphemism for shedding blood from a comedy film about jihad terrorists.
The Daily Mail notes that Laura Wilson “was a troubled teenager who was first identified as being at risk of sexual exploitation by British Pakistani men when she was 12,” in 2007. “She had developed several links with Asian men in her home town of Rotherham, South Yorkshire.” Yet even though all this was known and “workers at a child sexual exploitation project later sent a report to social services,” still “no action was taken to remove her from what became a continuing spiral of sexual abuse.”
Shortly before Asghar murdered her on October 12, 2011, “she ‘shamed’ Asghar and Mr Hussain by informing their families of her relationship with both men.” In Islamic culture, which is largely based on concepts of honor and shame, to bring shame upon someone is a monstruous crime. Wilson committed it by telling Ashtiaq Asghar’s mother that she was in love with her son and “wanted to have babies” with him.
Laura Wilson was no doubt completely unaware of the nature of a shame/honor culture and of her status within it as a non-Muslim girl, and so was likely dismayed when Asghar’s mother became enraged at her profession of love for Ashtiaq; she “attempted to hit Miss Wilson with a shoe, branding her ‘a dirty white b***h’ who should ‘keep your legs closed.’”
It was at this point, according to prosecutor Nicholas Campbell QC, that Asghar and Hussain concluded that Laura Wilson was “a loose cannon and they had to get rid of her.” They did so, and the price they had to pay could turn out not to be very steep at all. Ishaq Hussain was found not guilty of murdering Laura Wilson. Ashtiaq Asghar was found guilty; however, the Sheffield Star reported on April 19, 2024, that Asghar “was ordered to serve a minimum of 17-and-a-half years behind bars when he was sentenced in December 2011, meaning he could be eligible for parole in mid 2028. However, he could be released earlier if the time spent on remand waiting for his case to reach court is taken into account.”
Laura Wilson’s mother, Maggie Wilson, said: “He’ll be in his 30s when he’s released – still young enough to have a life. He could have children if he wanted – how is that fair?”
It wasn’t fair at all. Nothing was fair about this entire phenomenon.
















