The Conservatives have called an extraordinary meeting in Bradford to demand the city's inclusion in the National Rape Gang Inquiry.
This would not have happened without you. We raised the alarm, we built the pressure, and now the meeting that Reform bottled has been called by the Conservatives.
This is what your support does. This is what happens when we refuse to let those in power ignore what they were elected to do. Now let's see whether Reform find the courage to call the meeting in Calderdale and Kirklees.
Well done to all of you.
Raja
https://t.co/YR6uU8T17h
__________
If you take value in my work, and are yet to do so, please support my crowdfunder. I am taking legal action against one of would be Prime Minister Andy Burnham's key political allies, Jim McMahon MP. I'm sure you can decide for yourself why Labour politicians and their allies in the mainstream media are desperately attacking me.
The target is £100,000. We have just over 24 hours to try and raise the final £15,000. At the time of writing this post, we have reached an amazing £87,349.
This is the link to support the legal action.
https://t.co/7M2vm1AaXy
Thank You
Raja Miah MBE
Read my update here.
https://t.co/YR6uU8T17h
A judge in West Yorkshire, England has lifted the reporting restrictions on the convictions of a large group of Muslim men who systematically groomed and s—xually abused a victim from the age of 14–18.
Many Muslim immigrants from Pakistan have carried out mass r—pes and abuse of underage, poor white girls.
• Hannan Miah, 40 (Bradford) — 12 years for 4 r—pes
• Asif Budhia, 43 (Bradford) — 13 years for 4 r—pes
• Abdul Basith, 44 (Bradford) — 13.5 years for 4 r—pes and conspiracy to r—pe
• Burhan Uddin Ali, 39 (Bradford) — 13.5 years for 4 r—pes
• Muhammad Yasir, 40 (Bradford) — 10 years for r—pe
• Mohammed Nadeem Ali, 42 (Bradford) — 13 years for 4 r—pes
• Jameel Ahmed, 35 (Bradford) — 8 years for 4 r—pes
• Amjad Hussain, 39 (Keighley) — 10 years, 5 months for 5 r—pes
• Ashfaq Ahmed, 38 (Halifax) — 12 years for 2 r—pes
• Aftab Ahmed, 37 (Bradford) — 11 years for 3 r—pes
• Anwar Aziz, 36 (Bradford) — 15 years for 14 r—pes
• Yousaf Bhatti, 40 (Bradford) — 17 years for 8 r—pes
• Faisal Rashid, 37 (Bradford) — 15 years for 10 r—pes
• Omar Taj, 39 (Batley) — 15 years for 12 r—pes
• Shahinul Haq, 39 (Bradford) — 10 years for r—pe
'Stop deflecting about Jews and Christians!'
@PatrickChristys puts Director of The Campaign for Shared European Values, Mohammed Amin, on the spot over whether the majority Muslim view that homosexuality is a sin is compatible in Britain.
I agree with every single word you say @fiongoddarduk …. Very well said!! And I feel the same horror, shame, rage and disbelief at what I see day in and day out! This has consumed 20 years of my life and yet STILL there’s no accountability for those who knowingly did nothing!
Political correctness, ideologies and corrupt public officials, politicians, senior police, senior social workers etc have so much to answer for. But their day for being held to account is approaching I believe!
Too little, too late but I hope that it will ensure those at the top will then act differently NOW if they fear their negligence could have personal consequences, even prison sentences. I guarantee we will then see change! That’s the only way change will come imo
But I do believe the tied has turned.. Finally!! And people power will not go away this time……
'That is not normal. It's not good enough.'
Sexual abuse survivor Fiona Goddard responds to the sentencing of 15 men involved in a Bradford grooming gang, 11 years after the case was first identified.
Two-tier policing in Britain is not just a political phrase to me, it is painfully real.
Henry Nowak’s murder, what has shaken so many people is not only the violence that took his life, but what happened in his final moments. A young white British man repeatedly said four times that he had been stabbed. Nine times he said he could not breathe. Yet instead of urgent medical help being the immediate and overwhelming priority, the last words he heard were his rights being read to him after being arrested, as he lay dying on the floor. A young man with his whole life ahead of him, begging the very people who were meant to serve and protect him to save him, yet they watched him die whilst they prioritised handcuffing him over a racial accusation. He told them he’d been stabbed. The reply of the male police officer “I don’t think you have mate”, the female officer shining a torch in his eyes openly admitting his pupils were not responding. I hope to god they are not parents. I wept for that defenceless young man watching the footage. It is haunting. As a mother, I am sick to my stomach.
That image is unbearable. And it raises serious, uncomfortable questions.
In modern Britain, policing exists under intense scrutiny around race. When officers become so fearful of being accused of racism that they hesitate, second-guess, or overcorrect in situations involving suspects of a different racial background, something has gone deeply wrong.
Equality before the law cannot mean paralysis. It cannot mean different thresholds of response depending on who is involved.
There is a growing perception whether institutions admit it or not, that when the victim is white British and the opposing party is of a different race, officers tread more cautiously, sometimes appearing reluctant to intervene decisively. Not because of evidence. Not because of facts. But because of optics. Because of headlines. Because of fear.
Policing driven by fear of accusation is not impartial policing. It is reactive policing. And reactive policing costs lives.
As a survivor of a Muslim rape gang, I know what two-tier treatment and institutional failure feel like. I lived it. I went to the authorities as a victim and felt treated as a problem instead. I saw how institutions bend over backwards to avoid racial tension, even when vulnerable girls were being abused in plain sight. Victims were accused of lying. We were disbelieved. In some cases, we were even criminalised ourselves while the real perpetrators were left untouched for far too long.
That is the reality of our corrupt and cowardly systems. They protect their image. They protect diversity statistics. They protect careers. But they fail the vulnerable. Over, and over, and over again.
Other races and religions do not have more rights than white British people.. Rights are equal. Protection should be equal. Urgency should be equal. If a man says he has been stabbed, you save his life first. If a woman says she has been raped, you protect her first. If a child reports abuse, you investigate first. You do not filter your response through fear of being considered racist.
Britain cannot function on selective courage. Justice must not depend on who is watching, what social media might say, or which community might be offended. It must depend on facts, law, and the immediate protection of human life.
Two-tier policing, whether real in policy or real in practice, destroys trust. And once communities begin to believe that the system weighs race before it weighs evidence, that trust collapses entirely.
We deserve better than that. Equal protection under the law is not a radical demand. It is the foundation of a civilised society.
Kier Starmer may sit in PMQ’s saying lessons will be learned, but Kier, how many white British people does your Government have to fail before you realise this is an issue that has been ignored for decades? It’s costing people their lives!
The victim involved in this was first identified in 2015, it took 11 years to get these men sentenced. How many years were these men on bail walking the streets while she suffered? Then half of them will be out of prison in around 6 years! she waited nearly twice that length, just for justice.
Lets stop pretending this is normal. The UK justice needs to do better.
Several serving and former Hampshire Police Officers have told me that ‘we had it drummed into us about our white privilege and unconscious bias’.
Training was outsourced to a third party company and the trainer ‘was deeply hateful of white people and our culture.’
Officers have reported to me about being furious but unable to complain out of fear for their jobs.
This is exactly why I blocked the Race Action Plan as Home Secretary.
It is disgraceful that this stuff went on in policing. And the PCC and CC need to be held to account.
Reporting restrictions lifted.
15 men jailed for raping a girl as young as 14 in Bradford.
Jameel Ahmed committed 4 rapes, yet could leave prison in a little over 5 years.
Sentences for rape gang perpetrators are routinely pathetically short.
Britain is broken.
'I don't think you have, mate.' MATE. The world of contemptuous DEI-fuelled smugness in that word. The whole ruling regime is rotten - the #BeKind police force, who treat a dying young man like a lying nuisance in the name of being anti-racist, perhaps worst of all.
As Britain wakes up to the dangers of progressive race theory, I'm reminded of my report that Essex Police described white people as a "non-protected group."
Sadly it had little impact at the time. It's such a shame that it often takes a tragedy to force reassessment.
SHE REPORTED CHILD ABUSE 181 TIMES. BRITAIN SAID NOT NOW, THANKS.
Sara Rowbotham was an NHS sexual health coordinator in Rochdale. Between 2005 and 2011 she filed 181 detailed referrals to Greater Manchester Police and social services.
Each one named victims. Each one described systematic rape and trafficking of girls as young as 11. Each one went nowhere.
She was not ignored because the evidence was weak. She was ignored because the evidence was inconvenient.
Authorities labelled her not credible. Her team was dismissed. The official reason given for inaction was community cohesion.
Read that again.
Community cohesion. While children were being passed between men like property, the priority was keeping things quiet.
She was made redundant in 2014.
A 2024 independent review confirmed every referral she filed was credible, substantive and appropriately communicated. The same review identified 96 men still considered an active risk to children. Still out there. In 2024. Because the original response scraped only the surface and called it a job done.
Five police officers refused to cooperate with the review. They were not charged. They were not recalled. They retired on pensions.
Sara Rowbotham got an MBE.
The system that failed 181 times got a press release about lessons learned.
If this does not alarm you, you have not understood it yet.
@BBC@guardian@AndyBurnhamGM
Sadiq Khan said last year there was no "indication of ... grooming gangs" of the Rotherham model in London.
He was wrong. This form of abuse needs a particular focus to overcome the denial and obfuscation that has blighted investigations in the capital and all over the country.
Last month, I took the Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police, @AndyBurnhamGM’s police, to the High Court of Justice and won.
Burnham’s police had been protecting a man who hid his identity behind a VPN, stalked and threatened me relentlessly, shared details of my sister’s home address online and referenced raping her 6 year old daughter. He also posted AI generated content of my involved in Gay sex acts and fabricated stories linking me with child sex offenders.
This man, with direct links to Oldham’s Pakistani politicians, was trying to have me killed. Why? He objected to my campaigning to expose the Pakistani Rape Gangs and politicians links with organised crime in Oldham.
When caught red handed, senior police officers intervened to protect him from prosecution. They are still protecting him to this day and I am being forced to pursue a private prosecution.
Ask Andy Burnham if you want. He won’t say a word. He knows that I’m not making any of this up. Am I Andy Burnham? A judge in the High Court ruled that your police force had acted unlawfully.
Why is this relevant to the would be Prime Minister? As Police & Crime Commissioner, he is in charge of @gmpolice.
Aiding survivors for 10 years standing with them for 20
I opened the hub in 2018 because survivors had no where to go for support security and to be heard
At the time
Police politicians councils didn't care
Votes where more important
Not me Not us
We've been here since Day 1