Published: March 31, 2026. The English Chronicle Desk.
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The Home Office has today officially launched the Independent Inquiry into Grooming Gangs, a statutory investigation armed with unprecedented powers to compel testimony and seize records from police forces and local authorities. The launch follows a series of harrowing statements from survivors, one of whom warned that “hundreds of my abusers are still out there” because previous investigations were “quietly closed” to protect community cohesion. Chaired by Baroness Anne Longfield, the inquiry will spend the next three years examining how ethnicity, religion, and institutional “blind spots” allowed group-based child sexual exploitation to flourish unchecked across England and Wales.
The inquiry’s first major action is the formal integration of Operation Beaconport, a national policing taskforce established to review hundreds of “cold cases” where victims were previously disbelieved or dismissed. Any evidence of criminal conduct uncovered by the inquiry—including historical cover-ups by professionals in social services or the police—will be referred directly to Beaconport for potential prosecution. “Victims have every right to ask why this inquiry will be different,” Lady Longfield stated during the launch in Oldham. “My answer is that we will not wait years for a final report; we will publish our findings as we go, leaving no room for institutions to manage the narrative.”
Breaking the ‘Culture of Silence’
The 2026 inquiry marks a significant departure from previous audits by explicitly addressing the role of ethnicity and culture in both the offending and the failed institutional response. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood confirmed that the government has accepted all recommendations from the 2025 Casey Audit, which identified a “catastrophic failure” of leadership. To ensure victims are no longer criminalized for their own exploitation, the government has also introduced an automatic disregard scheme, allowing survivors to wipe historic “child prostitution” convictions from their records—a move hailed by campaign groups as a vital step toward “restoring stolen futures.”
The Race Against the Shredder
Despite the inquiry’s launch, a brewing political row has erupted over the “safeguarding of evidence.” A parliamentary committee report released last week suggested that the Home Office waited until January 2026 to formally instruct police forces not to destroy relevant records. Lawyers representing survivor groups expressed “grave concern” that vital documents from the late 1990s and early 2000s may have already been purged. “If the records are gone, the truth is gone,” said one legal representative. “We are in a race against time and the industrial shredder.”
As the oil price hits $116 and the “8 Million Dilemma” dominates the UK’s economic discourse, the grooming inquiry represents a high-stakes moral test for the government. With the first local investigations set to begin in Oldham and Rotherham next month, the eyes of the nation—and the hundreds of abusers still in the shadows—are on Lady Longfield’s panel. For the survivors who have spent decades shouting into the wind, the message today was clear: the era of looking the other way is over.
























































































