Grooming-Gang Survivors Quit UK Inquiry Amid Claims of ‘Toxic Culture’ and Institutional Failure (Worthy News In-Depth)


united kingdom map looking glass worthy christian newsby Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief

LONDON (Worthy News) – Two prominent female survivors of Britain’s grooming-gang scandals have resigned from a government-backed panel advising a national inquiry into child sexual exploitation, amid concerns about how authorities are handling one of the country’s worst social crises.

Fiona Goddard and Ellie-Ann Reynolds, both survivors of organised sexual abuse, said they quit the Victims and Survivors Liaison Panel due to what they described as an unwillingness to confront the religious, racial, and cultural factors that often shaped past cases, with many attackers belonging to Muslim communities. The women also cited a “toxic environment” and “condescending language toward survivors.”

The resignations come as Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government prepares a new national inquiry into group-based child sexual exploitation following years of public outrage over failures by police, social services, and local councils.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper announced earlier this year that the inquiry would examine systemic negligence that allowed thousands of children — mostly girls — to be abused for decades across England.

Yet survivor groups have warned that the process risks repeating past mistakes. Goddard, who was exploited by men of Pakistani heritage in the northern town of Rotherham, told The Guardian she feared the inquiry would be “another exercise in control rather than truth-telling.”

YEARS OF COVER-UPS

Britain’s grooming-gang scandals first came to light more than a decade ago, when investigations in Rotherham, Rochdale, Telford, and Oxford exposed networks of mostly men of South-Asian and Pakistani Muslim background who systematically exploited vulnerable, often white girls, some as young as 11.

An official 2014 inquiry led by Professor Alexis Jay found that at least 1,400 children were abused in Rotherham between 1997 and 2013, while police and council officials “turned a blind eye” for fear of inflaming racial tensions.

Subsequent government reviews estimated that tens of thousands of children may have experienced some form of sexual exploitation across the United Kingdom in recent decades. However, officials say the true scale remains unknown due to chronic under-reporting and inconsistent data collection.

INSTITUTIONAL FAILURE DEBATE

The inquiry’s early turmoil has reignited debate over institutional bias, political correctness, and accountability.

Critics accuse successive governments of hesitating to acknowledge the ethnic dimension of many grooming-gang cases amid an ongoing debate about asylum migration from mainly Muslim nations, while others warn against stereotyping entire communities.

A recent Home Office review confirmed that fears of being labelled racist caused some police forces and councils to delay action, leaving predators free to operate for years.

Goddard and Reynolds said their resignation followed “months of frustration” at how survivor input was sidelined. “We were meant to bring lived experience into the room — but instead, we were managed and silenced,” Goddard said.

She went further, accusing the inquiry of becoming “corrupt,” arguing that survivors were being marginalised rather than empowered to shape its direction.

SEARCH FOR TRUTH

The government has promised to appoint a new chair “independent of institutions implicated in past failures” and insists that the inquiry will proceed.

A Home Office spokesperson said it remained committed to “a robust, survivor-led investigation that gets to the truth and delivers justice.”

However, the walkouts have shaken public trust. Commentators warn that if the inquiry loses credibility before it begins, it could deepen victims’ sense of betrayal and further erode faith in Britain’s justice system.

The scandal continues to expose deep fissures in British society — over race, class, policing, and the protection of vulnerable children. Survivors say they want more than apologies: they want prosecutions, safeguards, and lasting reform.

“We’ve waited decades for the system to hear us,” Reynolds told reporters. “If this inquiry fails too, it won’t just be another scandal — it will prove the whole system is broken.”

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