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Episode 134: Raja Miah MBE on Britain's Grooming Gangs
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Episode 134: Raja Miah MBE on Britain's Grooming Gangs

The community organiser and citizen journalist discusses the gangs who preyed on young girls in northern England and the politicians he believes covered it up locally and nationally

In January 2025, Elon Musk started posting on X about a long-festering blot on the copybook of British justice, the decades-long organised mass rape of children across the cities of northern England by ‘grooming gangs’.

In places like Rotherham, Telford, Rochdale, and Oldham, years of horrific abuse had gone barely acknowledged by authorities, with intermittent, insufficient, and inconsistent prosecution. The majority of the victims were girls between the ages of 11 and 16.

After Musk’s social media posts, the scandal became international news, with the media often seeming more upset that Musk was criticising the British government than about the years of mass rape, human trafficking, torture, and murder that the alliterative sanitised phrase “grooming gangs” glosses over.

An inquiry led by Professor Alexis Jay, commissioned in 2013 by Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council and published the following year, gave a “conservative estimate…that approximately 1400 children were sexually exploited over the full Inquiry period, from 1997 to 2013,” and that “[t]his abuse is not confined to the past but continues to this day.” The report was, in a word, damning:

Over the first twelve years covered by this Inquiry, the collective failures of political and officer leadership were blatant. From the beginning, there was growing evidence that child sexual exploitation was a serious problem in Rotherham.

Jay subsequently oversaw a full report, published in 2022, that called rampant child abuse an “epidemic that left thousands of victims in its poisonous wake,” in which institutions “prioritised their reputations above the welfare of those they were duty bound to protect.”

In the report’s foreword, Jay wrote: “I urge the UK government, the Welsh Government and all other relevant institutions to implement promptly the Inquiry’s recommendations which are designed to protect children from sexual abuse in the future.” The report made detailed recommendations to the Home Office and called for swift action to prevent the failures of the past from continuing into the future.

In January 2025, when Musk’s social media activity drew fresh attention to the issue, it was twenty-seven months after the 2022 report and Professor Jay had been “frustrated” by the lack of action from government.

Whistleblowers, community activists, and citizen journalists like Raja Miah had been working to get the story proper scrutiny for years, but Musk’s involvement, while bringing attention, drove the characterisation of ‘grooming gangs’ as a far-right talking point, summed up as follows by Sky News in their coverage at the time:

Condemnation of rape and grooming gangs isn't far-right in itself: the entire British public shares exactly the same position. But there's evidence that Musk's introduction to the topic is a result of right-wing and far-right accounts on X.

At issue was a sore spot at the centre of the sordid sinuous saga: The majority of the victims in places like Rochdale and Rotherham had been white, and the majority of the perpetrators had been from the Asian, usually Pakistani, community. One inquiry into the failures that prevented or delayed justice mentioned a “nervousness about race”. Britain’s success story as a multicultural society was seen as being endangered by the ethnicity of the criminals and their victims.

On one side, a reasonable fear of opportunistic elements seizing on the role of minorities in horrific crimes to drum up violence and social unrest. On the other side, the very real experience of being frozen out of the justice system and abandoned by institutions and the government because admitting and facing the problem head on would concede something that could be misused by those elements.

Raja Miah joins me in this episode to give a detailed insight into the genesis of the scandal, the communities that were affected, and the successive governments that looked the other way.

Raja is a second generation Bangladeshi Muslim who received an MBE in 2004 for his community service. He is also a self-described rabble-rouser who proudly points out that the Labour Party considers him “a dangerous man”. He says that he has “a bounty on his head from both gangsters and Islamists who he has exposed for their open links to Labour Party politicians.”

You can watch his regular transmissions on his Recusant Nine YouTube channel, follow him on X, or visit his website at Red Wall & The Rabble.


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