You'd be hard pressed to find a country where things are more upside down.
Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu from Ethiopia entered the UK by boat and made his way to the town of Epping, England. Once there, he decided that he wanted to have sex with all the teenage girls.
No, really, within a few days of arriving in England, he sexually assaulted multiple girls.
From the Independent:
During his three-day trial at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court, evidence was put forward that he told two teenagers he wanted to 'have a baby with each of them' and attempted to kiss them.
He then went on to put his hand on one of the girls' thighs and stroke her hair, the court heard.
Kebatu was also found to have sexually assaulted a woman by trying to kiss her, putting his hand on her leg, and telling her she was pretty.
The incident with one of the girls happened after she offered him a slice of pizza.
The girl told police she 'froze' as the defendant sexually assaulted her and had told Kebatu, 'No, I'm 14' when he spotted her again in Epping the following day.
The court heard his response to the teenager was: 'No, no, it doesn't matter, you could come back to the Bell Hotel with me.'
Instead of being deported, or perhaps executed as a public example of what civilized countries do to foreigners who try to rape their children, Kebatu received a measly year in jail.
Meanwhile, a crowd of 500 locals protested outside the Bell Hotel, which is one of many across the country housing migrants on the British taxpayers' dime, on July 17. These Englishmen, upset that their government was importing rapists from other countries into their community, had signs saying "protect our kids."
50 counter-protesters came out to defend the rights of migrants to live in free housing in England. As tensions grew, police struggled to maintain peace, leading to several arrests.
The first three men sentenced were given longer sentences than the migrant sex offender.
Stuart Williams is a painter and decorator who received two years and four months for "kicking out at an officer" and climbing onto the roof of a school as he made his way onto the hotel roof, where he "attempted to ring the bell thereon."
Martin Peagram, a local roofer and young father of two, was given two years and two months for kicking a police officer and "throwing a can."
Supermarket worker Dean Smith was also given one year and ten months for "punching an officer's [riot] shield."
The judge, Jamie Sawyer, explained to the men that he was was convinced their actions were "racially motivated, at least in part."
And yes, Sawyer looks exactly like you've pictured him.
Each of you, what you did went beyond protest and that became criminal when you acted as you did.
While that may be true, what does it say when a local painter, grocery store worker, and roofer trying to protect their kids from foreign predators are given more jail time than the foreign predators?
As a result of mass protests, the Bell Hotel is now scheduled to be closed, as are many other migrant hotels across the nation.
As writer Tom Slater noted in an August op-ed for The Spectator, however, the problem is far from over.
This was never just about hotels anyway. This is about communities being forced to pay the price for successive governments losing control of the borders. Until that fundamental failure is corrected, the unrest is going nowhere.
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