Race Riots, Grooming Gangs, and a School Built on Lies

The Truth About Waterhead Academy Revealed!
When parents first contacted me about Waterhead Academy, they didn't describe a symbol of integration. They described a crime scene dressed up as a school.
This wasn't their opinion. It was their lived experience. Backed by witness testimony, safeguarding failures, and an Ofsted report that declared the school "inadequate". A place where foul, racist, and homophobic language was normalised, where leaders had "overseen a decline in the quality of education," and where too many pupils were simply not safe. When you've spent years documenting how our institutions abandoned children to predators, you learn to see past the fresh paint and motivational posters to the rot beneath.
Waterhead Academy was never about education. It was about erasure. A political monument built on the screams of working-class girls, designed to make politicians feel better about communities they'd spent decades betraying.
The Laboratory of Lies
The 2001 Oldham riots should have been a wake-up call. Instead, they became an opportunity. Not for genuine reconciliation, but for social engineering on an industrial scale.
The formula was simple: Take two segregated schools serving parallel communities. Merge them into one shiny academy. Declare victory over division. Problem solved - at least on paper, at least for the cameras, at least until the next election.
But you can't bulldoze your way to community cohesion any more than you can therapy your way out of institutional racism. What you can do is create the perfect conditions for predators to thrive while everyone pretends integration has been achieved.
The children weren't students. They were test subjects. And the experiment? Whether British society would choose uncomfortable truths over comfortable lies.
The authorities weren't asking "What's best for these children?" They were asking "How can we make ourselves look good?" The real test wasn't whether education would improve. It was whether they could get away with sacrificing children for political optics.
Would we wake up to the reality of what was happening to our daughters? Or would we keep swallowing the lies about diversity being our strength while our girls were being taken away and gang raped?
The children became lab rats in an experiment designed by cowards. They became proof that British institutions will feed children to predators rather than face uncomfortable truths.
We chose our comfort over their safety. Our girls paid with their childhoods.
When Safeguarding Became Child Sacrifice
Here's what the Casey Report has now confirmed: our institutions didn't fail to protect children because they lacked resources or expertise. They failed because they were more terrified of being called racist than of children being raped.
This is the rotten heart of institutional Britain. A system where protecting reputation matters more than protecting the innocent. Where cultural sensitivity training becomes a manual for moral cowardice. Where the greatest sin isn't child abuse - it's noticing patterns that contradict the diversity narrative.
I've spoken to teachers who tried to raise concerns and were destroyed for it. Parents who demanded answers and were sent on parenting courses. Police officers who wanted to investigate but were told it would "inflame community tensions."
Meanwhile, the predators understood our weaknesses better than we understood our own values. They weaponised our tolerance against our children. They turned our institutions into hunting grounds. They made our schools processing centres for industrial-scale grooming and gang rape.
And our response? Silence. Denial. Deflection. Anything but acknowledgment that we had fed children to monsters to avoid difficult conversations about difficult truths.
The Machinery of Complicity
Waterhead wasn't just negligent. It was complicit. Not through malice, but through something worse: wilful blindness serving political orthodoxy.
When girls went missing from lessons, attendance wasn't the priority, avoiding "stigmatising" certain communities was. When children exhibited signs of trauma, safeguarding protocols were secondary to safeguarding reputations. When parents raised concerns, they were painted as hysterical racists rather than protective mothers and fathers.
The school became a recruitment centre. The car park became a collection point. The surrounding takeaways became processing stations. And our institutions? They became accessories to the crime through their determined refusal to see what was happening in broad daylight.
This wasn't ignorance. It was ideology made manifest. The belief that protecting feelings matters more than protecting children. That maintaining the illusion of harmony is worth sacrificing the safety of the vulnerable.
The Predator's Paradise
Let me tell you what predators learned from Waterhead and schools like it: British institutions are spineless. They will sacrifice anyone, including children, to avoid being called names by activists.
The grooming gangs didn't emerge despite our safeguarding systems. They emerged because of them. Systems designed to protect the vulnerable had been captured by an ideology that prioritised optics over outcomes.
These men understood that our greatest weakness wasn't racism - it was the terror of being accused of it. They knew that cultural sensitivity had become cultural paralysis. They recognised that our institutions would rather cover up crimes than risk uncomfortable headlines.
So they adapted. They went from targeting care homes to targeting school. Care leavers, broken homes, forgotten children was not enough. They needed more children. They needed children that were not broken, to take away and break. What better place than a school like Waterhead?
They used our own values against us, knowing that every report, every concern, every attempt at intervention would be filtered through the lens of "community relations."
They turned our tolerance into their weapon. Our diversity into their camouflage. Our institutions into their accomplices. Our politicians into their partners.
The Price of Institutional Cowardice
The human cost of this moral collapse cannot be measured in statistics alone. Behind every case number is a childhood destroyed. Behind every closed file is a family shattered. Behind every covered-up crime is a community betrayed.
These weren't just individual tragedies. They were institutional murders: the systematic killing of innocence serving political convenience.
The girls who tried to speak out were dismissed as "unreliable witnesses." The parents who demanded action were labelled "troublemakers." The communities that raised concerns were branded "far-right."
Meanwhile, the perpetrators continued their work, protected not just by silence but by active institutional resistance to investigation.
This is what happens when virtue signalling becomes more important than actual virtue. When appearing progressive matters more than protecting the vulnerable. When ideological purity trumps moral duty.
Beyond the Whitewash
Now we have a national inquiry. After years of denial, deflection, and desperate attempts to avoid accountability, our political class has finally been forced to acknowledge what everyone else already knew.
But inquiries are not justice. Reports are not accountability. Recommendations are not consequences.
The real test isn't what this inquiry discovers - we already know what happened. The real test is whether anyone pays a price for it.
Until there are consequences for institutional failure, there will be more institutional failures. Until careers end and reputations are destroyed, the culture that enabled this will continue. Until the people who prioritised their comfort over children's safety face the same scrutiny they subjected worried parents to, nothing will change. Until politicians and police officers see prison time, the rape gangs will believe they have permission to continue.
The victims of this scandal didn't just deserve better protection. They deserved adults who would put their safety before political narratives. They deserved institutions that served their interests, not ideological orthodoxy. They deserved a system that valued truth over comfort.
Instead, they got abandoned. Betrayed. Sacrificed on the altar of political correctness.
The Reckoning
Waterhead Academy stands as more than a symbol of institutional failure. It stands as a monument to moral collapse. To the moment when British society chose protecting feelings over protecting children. When maintaining the illusion of integration became more important than the reality of exploitation.
This isn't just about one school or one town. It's about a system captured by an ideology that values the appearance of virtue over its substance. That prioritises diversity over duty. That chooses comfort over courage.
Every institution that failed these children bears responsibility for what happened. Every council that covered up, every police force that looked away, every school that stayed silent. Not just moral responsibility, but legal responsibility.
The children who suffered deserved protectors. They got betrayers. They deserved justice. They got abandoned. They deserved truth. They got lies.
Now they're getting an inquiry. After years of denying there was a problem. After dismissing concerned parents as racists. After protecting the perpetrators and silencing the victims. But will this inquiry have the guts to ask the real questions? Or will it be another establishment whitewash designed to protect the guilty?
Here's what they need to investigate: How many Waterheads are there across Britain? How many schools became hunting grounds for rape gangs? How many councils covered up abuse to protect their diversity credentials? How many police forces looked the other way rather than face accusations of racism?
And most importantly: Who knew? Who covered it up? Who prioritised their careers over children's lives?
The victims deserve more than another report that gathers dust. They deserve names. They deserve prosecutions. They deserve justice.
The leaders of Waterhead Academy should be forced to pay for what they allowed to take place. As should every school leader across the country who chose silence over safeguarding and enabled this horror. The only question left is whether we finally have the courage to do what's necessary. Or whether we'll let another generation of children pay for our cowardice.
If enough of us stand up, we won’t just expose the cover-up - we’ll see politicians jailed, this government fall, and the Labour Party finished.
If you believe Keir Starmer and his bloc vote reliant Labour Party leaders, the cover up of the gang rape of little White girls was a far right conspiracy and 'bare faced lies'.
If you believe me, you know the truth: They didn’t act because they benefited from staying silent. The system rewarded their complicity. This national inquiry wasn’t a gift from the government. It was forced by our movement.
I’m not a Maggie Oliver. I’m not a Tommy Robinson or a Charlie Peters. I’m a political campaigner. Despite attempts to smear me, imprison me, even kill me, I’ve led the political movement that forced this inquiry into existence.
They tried to smear me, silence me, even jail me. They failed. Ask yourself, what would you have done if you were me? Instead of giving up, I continued. And now, with your help, we can finish what we started. We need 10,000 committed supporters. Thanks to you, we now have over 5,000 committed people willing to learn the facts, raise awareness, and fight smart in their own communities. That 's some going. We need 5,000 more.
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- Raja Miah MBE