Betrayal, Silence, Resurrection: A Nation at War with Its Conscience

Betrayal, Silence, Resurrection: A Nation at War with Its Conscience

This story is about betrayal. Not just by individuals, but by the entire machinery of the British state. Police officers. Council officials. Senior politicians. Journalists. Civil servants. All of them, in different ways and at different times, made the same calculated decision: to protect themselves instead of the children they were supposed to serve.

They knew the consequences of their actions. And they did it anyway. Some did it to get ahead. Others took turns and joined in.

For more than half a century, vulnerable girls, overwhelmingly white and working-class, were systematically raped, trafficked, and brutalised by networks of predominantly Pakistani rape gangs.

No one knows the exact number of children abused, so vast was the scale of abuse. Former Prime Minister Liz Truss referenced over 100,000 victims. What is agreed is that it happened on an industrial scale across at least 50 towns and cities.

These facts alone make people uncomfortable. But it’s not the most disturbing part of this story. What’s worse is that the authorities knew it was happening. They saw the evidence. They interviewed the survivors. They read the reports. And rather than confront the truth, they chose silence. They shut down investigations. They buried files. They intimidated whistleblowers. They turned their backs on children because doing the right thing might damage political alliances, fracture voting blocs, or trigger accusations of racism.

That is the heart of this scandal. Not just the abuse - but the scale of the cover-up.

The story I share is not a recounting of survivor testimonies. You can and should go somewhere else if that’s what you want. Mine is an examination of how a political, institutional, and cultural framework was constructed to allow mass child abuse to continue unchecked for years, while the British public was fed platitudes, spin, and strategic distractions.

The story I tell is not theoretical. It’s grounded in documented evidence, survivor testimony, leaked correspondence, and over six years of direct experience. I share the key milestones in a story the establishment desperately wants buried. So much so, the State repeatedly falsified evidence in a malicious attempt to imprison me.

Judge dismisses harassment trial on the day it was due to start
A judge has dismissed a harassment charge against a man on the day his trial was due to begin

What follows is not theory. It’s a chronology of how institutional betrayal took root, grew in silence, and metastasised across the country. A scandal where every safeguard was dismantled and every warning ignored:

  • The isolation faced by the first people who dared to speak out, when the public still wasn’t listening and the media refused to investigate.
  • The gradual transformation of public figures like Maggie Oliver, who began within the system believing in its integrity, but eventually confronted its failures and now walks a line between public recognition and the need for uncompromising accountability.
  • The complicity of political leaders who not only ignored the crisis but actively obstructed efforts to expose it. Powerful figures like Andy Burnham, Jim McMahon, and others in the Labour Party who used the language of community relations to mask cowardice and pursue political gain.
  • The media’s role, not as watchdog, but as gatekeeper. More concerned with narrative control than protecting the vulnerable.
  • The failure of every review, report, and regulatory body to hold a single senior figure to account.
  • The impact of the release of Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips' callous correspondence to Oldham Council refusing a Public Inquiry into the gang rape of the town's children. An exposure which, only through the direct intervention of Elon Musk, marked a tipping point that pierced the public consciousness and revealed the scale of betrayal.
  • The subsequent launch of not one, but two independent campaigns: Rupert Lowe's Rape Gang Inquiry and Maggie Oliver’s #TheyKnew campaign. One seeking to get to the truth following the government’s deceitful refusal to launch a National Inquiry. The other seeking to bypass inquiries altogether and pursue private prosecutions.
  • And finally, the moral cost of multiculturalism as practised in Britain: a doctrine that turned cultural sensitivity into institutional paralysis and left working-class White girls to be treated as collateral damage.

Please do not mistake my work as just an exposé. I am not a journalist. I am a campaigner. Mine is a call to action.

Because the cover-up hasn’t ended. The gang rapes are continuing. The survivors are still waiting. The perpetrators are still protected. And those who orchestrated the silence, those who destroyed documents, suppressed reports, and traded justice for political convenience, still hold positions of power. They’ve delayed justice long enough. Now we’re naming names.

This campaign has been built not by institutions, but by ordinary people. By survivors, whistleblowers, journalists, and campaigners who refused to look away. It is powered by evidence, not ideology. By moral clarity, not political spin. And it will not stop until those who failed are held to account.

Not just in print. But in court.

So if you’re here for comfort, look away now. What follows will make you angry. It will challenge everything you thought you knew about the state, the media, and the stories we tell ourselves about justice.

But if you’re here to see the truth, unvarnished, documented, and demanding action, then join us. Because now you know. And that knowledge comes with a responsibility.


For those new to me, I'm Raja Miah MBE. I spent six years leading a small team that exposed how Labour politicians protected Pakistani Rape Gangs and exchanged working class White girls for votes.

My work continues despite powerful forces including the media, politicians, police and public officials all conspiring to desperately stop me and bury the truth. Both politicians and police have all repeatedly tried and failed to have me imprisoned. My crime? Refusing to look the other way to the gang rape of children.

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Raja 🙏