Gerry@GerryKeogh_
CCTV footage reportedly shows Belov physically attacking the child and shoving her to the ground.
We all Remember the 12-year old Scottish Child in Dundee who was viciously condemned, branded a thug, and dragged through the mud for daring to hold an axe and knife while confronting an Adult Man?
Well, the case is now unfolding in court and the details paint a far less convenient picture for the virtue signallers.
It appears the Bulgarian man, Ilia Belov, repeatedly leered at the girl with vile sexual comments, telling the 12-year-old “Come here sexy. I will show you how to have a good time.” He had been sexually harassing her and her friends (aged 12-14) at a bus stop, and when they pushed back, he escalated by assaulting them.
CCTV footage reportedly shows Belov physically attacking the girl and shoving her to the ground. The terrified child only produced the weapons after being pushed and while trying to protect herself and her sister from further harm.
Yet instead of reserving their outrage for a grown man sexually harassing and allegedly assaulting young girls, too many Scottish men and women quick to signal their “progressive” credentials chose to savage the scared Scottish child as some kind of dangerous little racist or troublemaker.
Remember you all leapt to defend or excuse the adult aggressor, rushing to dismiss any concerns as “far right misinformation” or “racism.”
Even worse were the politicians who couldn’t wait to pile on. Figures like
Humza Yousaf and John Swinney eagerly dismissed early reports, accused critics of stoking fear, and lectured the public about “misinformation” all while the girls’ accounts of sexual remarks and assault were apparently being borne out in court. Their knee-jerk rush to protect the narrative over protecting Scottish children was shameful and telling.
The trial continues. It will be very interesting indeed to see what sentence (if any) Belov receives and whether those who demonised a 12-year-old child ever find the decency to reflect on their own disgraceful rush to judgement, perhaps a public apology from the politicians who called the child out, wrongly.