कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
India's Deadliest Enemy in the UK Are the Mirpuris
The Sunday Guardian
|July 27, 2025
How one community wages war against India from the UK, and is now even turning against Britain.

The multi-decade grooming gang scandal, one of the biggest assaults on women in British history, has exposed a critical issue that very few people like to talk about—the deadly effect of the community called Mirpuris. A majority of the deadliest assailants who operated as gangs and "chains" abducting and sexually abusing women for years, in many cases, were Pakistani Mirpuris.
So named because they originate from a town called Mirpur in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), in the 1950s such was the volume of migration from Mirpur to the UK that even today the region is known as "Little England", and the pound sterling is the other currency accepted widely here apart from the Pakistani rupee. The Mirpuri forms a significant portion of the British Pakistani population, with estimates suggesting 60-80% of British Pakistanis in England have Mirpuri roots.
The community's mass migration to the UK was catalyzed by the construction of the Mangla Dam in the 1960s, which displaced over 100,000 people from a rural, underdeveloped region. This foundational experience of forced displacement shaped the community's settlement patterns in concentrated enclaves within Britain's industrial towns and the formation of tight-knit social structures, such as the biraderi kinship system.
This context is useful in understanding the community's origins in Britain. They arrived not as educated, urban professionals, but as a displaced rural population with little or no experience of urban living in Pakistan. Their collective identity was forged by the shared trauma of displacement and a sense of abandonment by the Pakistani state, creating a strong, cohesive group whose initial socio-economic conditions would profoundly shape their future in Britain. Additionally, it cannot be denied that especially after the early years, Pakistani intelligence agencies encouraged more and more Mirpuris to settle in the UK to create a pressure group in that country against India.
यह कहानी The Sunday Guardian के July 27, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The Sunday Guardian से और कहानियाँ

The Sunday Guardian
Inside India's 2016 surgical strikes: Planning, precision, deterrence
The strikes came 11 days after the 18 September 2016 Uri attack, in which four militants stormed an Army base, killing 19 soldiers. The scale of the losses shocked the nation and demanded a forceful response.
3 mins
September 28, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
World Food India 2025 sees MoUs worth Rs 1 lakh crore in first two days
The second day of World Food India 2025, currently underway at Bharat Mandapam, marked major strides in India's vision to become the global food basket.
1 mins
September 28, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
CLOSE PARTNERSHIP WITH INDIA VITAL FOR U.S. GLOBAL SECURITY
Absence of a trade deal with India would seriously compromise the US in the ongoing hybrid confrontation with China. Whether a deal will come about or not depends in large part on the White House.
4 mins
September 28, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
THREATS TO RUIN FUTURE: EX-STUDENT REVEALS HOW DELHI GODMAN SUBJECTED FEMALE STUDENTS TO SEXUAL ABUSE
A red Volvo with a \"UN\" number plate, a BMW, a fake visiting card of \"permanent ambassador of UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)\"-Swami Chaitanyananda Saraswati had built around himself a larger-than-life aura and knew how to show off in elite circles to project himself as an \"internationally acclaimed writer.\" But none of this corresponded with the reality: he is a serial sexual offender, according to students who have passed from Sri Sharada Institute of Indian Management and Research (SRISIIM), located in Delhi's Vasant Kunj
7 mins
September 28, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
VISA WARS AND THE GREAT BRAIN DRAIN: MAKE INDIA GREAT AGAIN
America's dramatic hike in the H1B visa fee is a watershed moment for global talent mobility, forcing India to confront both risks and opportunities. This is more than a cautionary tale; it is a chance for India to assert itself in the geopolitics of human capital.
5 mins
September 28, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
CHINA-RUSSIA-NORTH KOREA TRILATERAL ALIGNMENT CHALLENGES LEE JAE-MYUNG
Emerging trilateral ties complicate South Korea's efforts to engage North Korea diplomatically.
5 mins
September 28, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
Farewell to MiG-21, India's first supersonic fighter
On 26 September 2025, the skies over Chandigarh fell silent to a sound that had defined Indian air power for more than six decades.
5 mins
September 28, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
'Surat-Bilimora section of bullet train project to become operational in 2027'
Union Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw has said that the Surat to Bilimora is the first section of the Bullet Train project that will become operational and several new technologies have been introduced into the work on the tracks.
3 mins
September 28, 2025

The Sunday Guardian
POLISH DIPLOMAT DEEPENS INDO-POLISH CULTURAL TIES THROUGH ARTISTIC EXCHANGES
Polish Institute New Delhi director champions cinema, music, literature, and heritage collaborations.
4 mins
September 28, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
LOC issued against Pune gangster Nilesh Ghaywal
A Look Out Circular has been issued against notorious Pune gangster Nilesh Ghaywal, who is suspected to have left the country despite facing fresh criminal charges.
1 mins
September 28, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size