Prime Minister Keir Starmer launches historic inquiry into grooming gangs as survivors break silence
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has initiated a national inquiry into grooming gangs after Baroness Louise Casey's audit revealed widespread institutional failures. This decision reverses previous hesitation and offers hope to survivors who fe...

“What matters most is getting justice for the victims,” said Paul Waugh, Labour MP for Rochdale, a key flashpoint in earlier grooming scandals. He welcomed Starmer’s decision to back a statutory inquiry, which can compel witnesses and documents, ensuring inquiries are not stifled by local authorities.
Grooming gangs refer to groups of men, often operating in towns like Rotherham, Rochdale, and Telford, who sexually abused and trafficked vulnerable girls, often over many years.
Victims were groomed with attention, gifts, or alcohol, then exploited. Authorities repeatedly failed to act, with some fearing accusations of racism due to the ethnic background of many offenders. The scandal exposed deep institutional neglect and cultural taboos.
Fiona, a survivor from Bradford quoted by Sky News, said she still “thinks it’s shocking” how social services ignored her crying for help and even blamed her “lifestyle choices”
Why national inquiry now?
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) outlined hundreds of failings earlier in 2022, but its recommendations remain largely unimplemented. A local audit by Baroness Casey, completed recently, went further, finding a nationwide pattern of institutional indifference and embedded failures.
Starmer said he “read every single word” of the audit and would implement Casey’s call for a statutory investigation under the Inquiries Act. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will formally introduce the inquiry in Parliament next week, accompanied by Casey’s full report.
What's next
The inquiry will coordinate both national and targeted local investigations, even in areas where local authorities might resist. This structured, legally empowered approach stands to uncover who failed, why, and how to prevent it again.
For survivors like Fiona, it’s a long-awaited step toward justice and the chance for their voices to finally be heard.
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