British far-right activist Tommy Robinson has ignited a firestorm of criticism after a viral video surfaced in which he links cousin marriages within the British Pakistani community to a disproportionate share of genetic birth defects in the UK. The video, marked by inflammatory language and controversial statistics, has triggered widespread backlash across social media and renewed debate over the intersection of culture, public health, and racism.
In the video posted on X, Robinson claims that ‘76% of Pakistanis in Bradford marry their first cousins’ and asserts that this practice is to blame for ‘33% of the UK’s birth defects,’ despite British Pakistanis constituting just 3% of the population. ‘They are being born retarded,’ Robinson says, further alleging that the community’s reproductive practices are placing a massive financial burden on the country’s healthcare system.
‘This is costing the UK billions,’ he claims. ‘All because Muhammad married his cousin. I don’t care what Muhammad did in the 7th century, he was a barbarian. It has to stop in Great Britain.’
Backlash Over Hate-Filled Rhetoric
The video drew sharp criticism across platforms, with users condemning the remarks as racist, dehumanizing, and misleading. ‘This is a mix of distorted stats and open racism,’ one user wrote. ‘Yes, cousin marriage raises some medical risks, but reducing an entire group to slurs is vile.’
Others accused Robinson of weaponizing health concerns to push an anti-Muslim narrative, while misrepresenting data to inflame public sentiment.
What the Data Really Says
Fact-checkers and researchers were quick to counter Robinson’s claims. According to the Born in Bradford study, between 2007 and 2010, about 60% of marriages in Bradford’s Pakistani community were between cousins, significantly lower than Robinson’s cited figure. By 2016–2019, that rate had dropped to around 46%.
As for birth defects, NHS and academic research have noted that British Pakistanis are overrepresented in cases of certain genetic disorders, accounting for roughly 30–33% of such cases, largely due to consanguineous marriages. However, experts emphasize that solutions lie in genetic counseling, education, and community outreach, not vilification.
The Bigger Picture
Robinson’s comments, critics argue, aren’t about public health, but about fueling xenophobic narratives. By framing a cultural practice through the lens of racial resentment, Robinson has once again positioned himself at the center of controversy, one that touches on the complexities of multicultural Britain and the need to distinguish between genuine health advocacy and hate speech.
