Three months after Casey's review, survivors are still shut out. No clarity. No consultation. No justice.
For more than a decade, I have fought to expose the truth about how children have been failed by those meant to protect them. I left Greater Manchester Police in 2012 because I could no longer be complicit in the deliberate neglect of vulnerable children who were being raped and brutalised while institutions looked the other way. Since then, I have dedicated my life to giving those children and survivors a voice.
But here we are, in 2025, and nothing feels different. Baroness Casey’s review confirmed what survivors, campaigners and whistleblowers like me have been shouting for years – that children have been failed on an industrial scale, and that progress remains painfully slow. The Government’s response was to announce a statutory inquiry. On the surface, that sounded positive. But scratch beneath the surface and the reality is clear: three months on, survivors still have no information about how this inquiry will work. Everything remains behind closed doors.
The letter we received from Jess Phillips MP, on behalf of the Government, was filled with warm phrases and empty words. It offered nothing concrete. No detail. No timetable. No guarantees. It is insulting – to me, to The Maggie Oliver Foundation, and to the survivors we support.
We are a small national charity, but we are determined to hold this Government to account because the stakes could not be higher. Survivors cannot afford another whitewash like the IICSA Organised Networks strand in 2020, where non-institutional voices were ignored, survivors were silenced, and institutions lied to protect themselves.
That is why we at The Maggie Oliver Foundation are fighting on two fronts:
Let me be absolutely clear:
The actions we are taking – demanding transparency in the statutory inquiry and challenging the Government in court through Judicial Review – are not small matters. They are nationally important. They will determine how this country responds to the rape and exploitation of children by gangs of men.
The Maggie Oliver Foundation may be small, but we are fearless. We have the trust of survivors, the truth of their lived experiences, and the courage to speak when others stay silent. That is why we will continue to fight.
Jess Phillips’ letter, with its lack of substance, exposes a painful truth: survivors still cannot trust this Government. Three months on, there is still no clarity, no openness, and no evidence that survivors’ voices will be central. That is shocking and unacceptable.
At The Maggie Oliver Foundation, we will not stop. We are fighting fiercely on two fronts – through the courts, and through the statutory inquiry – because nothing less will do. Survivors have already waited too long.
The time for truth, justice, and change is not tomorrow, not next year, but right now.
👉 Click here to read the three letters in full.
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