The United Kingdom is once again in the spotlight for accommodating regressive practices imported from its immigrant communities, even at the expense of public health. The latest controversy erupted after the National Health Service (NHS) defended first-cousin marriages, describing them as beneficial in terms of family wealth pooling and support systems. This defense comes despite overwhelming medical evidence linking such marriages to serious genetic defects, infant mortality, and long-term healthcare burdens. The episode reveals a disturbing pattern: in its eagerness to appease Britain’s largest Pakistani immigrant community, the state is prioritizing “cultural sensitivities” over the well-being of its own citizens.
According to the 2021 Census, the UK is home to over 1.6 million people of Pakistani origin, making them the largest South Asian diaspora in Europe. Cousin marriages are deeply embedded within sections of this community, with reports suggesting that nearly 55% of British Pakistanis marry their first cousins. While this practice is widely criticized across the world as a form of consanguinity that heightens the risk of congenital disorders, the British establishment is now justifying it under the garb of multiculturalism.
The NHS Narrative: Culture Over Health
The controversy began when the NHS Genomics Education Programme attempted to defend cousin marriages in a public document. Instead of highlighting the genetic dangers, it listed “benefits” such as financial consolidation within families and strong social support networks. This justification immediately triggered outrage. Medical professionals pointed out that glossing over the risks amounted to deliberately misleading the public.
The NHS guidance even cited a BBC report acknowledging that areas like Bradford home to a large Pakistani-origin population record significantly higher cases of genetic disorders due to widespread cousin marriages. One tragic example described families who lost several children in succession to recessive diseases. Instead of treating this as a public health emergency, the report brushed aside these consequences as “oversimplifications” and cautioned against “stigmatization of certain communities.”
The British Society for Genetic Medicine (BSGM) further claimed that banning cousin marriages on health grounds would be unjustified. This deliberate downplaying of medical evidence has raised suspicions that political correctness is once again dictating health policy in Britain.
Backlash from Experts and Politicians
The publication provoked strong criticism from academics, social scientists, and politicians. Dr. Patrick Nash of Oxford University’s Pharos Foundation condemned the guidance as “truly dismaying,” describing cousin marriage bluntly as “incest” and urging a complete ban. He argued that there could be no balance between cultural lifestyle choices and the severe public health risks they entail.
Conservative MP Richard Holden was equally scathing, accusing the Labour Party of pandering to “misogynistic community controllers” and refusing to confront a damaging cultural practice. He emphasized that children of such unions are far more likely to suffer from conditions such as sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, and congenital abnormalities, all of which place an immense burden on the NHS. According to statistics, one in five children treated for congenital conditions in British hospitals are of Pakistani heritage.
The financial cost is staggering. Billions of pounds are spent annually on medical treatments for genetic disorders linked to inbreeding. Yet the British government continues to shield the practice from scrutiny under the pretext of avoiding racial or cultural offense.
Evidence from Studies: Bradford as a Case Study
Perhaps the most damning evidence comes from the long-running Born in Bradford study, which tracked more than 13,000 children born between 2007 and 2011. Of these, 37% of Pakistani-origin couples were first cousins. The results showed shocking health disparities.
Children of cousin marriages had double the risk of developing recessive genetic conditions compared to the general population. They were also more likely to experience speech and language delays, require more frequent medical care, and perform poorly in early developmental assessments. The probability of achieving a “good stage of development” at the age of five was only 54% for children of first cousins, compared to 64% for children of unrelated parents.
In terms of congenital abnormalities, the findings were even more alarming. First-cousin couples had a defect rate of 6.5% compared to 2.5% in the general population. Researchers concluded that consanguinity was a significant and independent risk factor for infant deaths and severe disabilities.
In some extreme cases, cousin marriages have been linked to rare syndromes such as Uner Tan Syndrome, where children exhibit “reverse evolution” characteristics, walking on all fours with profound cognitive impairments. Such shocking outcomes underline the catastrophic risks of normalizing consanguinity.
Cultural Defenses and Political Cowardice
Despite overwhelming evidence, defenders of cousin marriages within the Pakistani community continue to invoke religion and tradition. Interviews with British Pakistanis reveal a dismissive attitude toward medical findings, with many attributing congenital disorders to “God’s will.” Some even argued that disabilities can occur in any family, ignoring the significantly higher risks in cousin marriages.
British activist Tommy Robinson stirred controversy by claiming that although Pakistanis form only 3% of the UK population, they account for a disproportionate share of birth defects due to high rates of consanguinity. He cited data showing that 76% of Pakistanis in Bradford marry their first cousins, creating a vicious cycle of genetic vulnerability.
Yet, successive British governments Labour and Conservative alike have shied away from decisive action. Just as the grooming gang scandals were buried for decades under the fear of being branded racist, the medical dangers of cousin marriages are now being obscured in the name of cultural relativism.
Multiculturalism at the Cost of Children’s Lives
The NHS defense of cousin marriages exposes the dangerous extremes of Britain’s multicultural politics. By elevating cultural practices above medical science, the establishment is not only betraying its own healthcare mandate but also putting thousands of children at risk. The data from Bradford and other cities makes it abundantly clear: consanguinity significantly increases the likelihood of birth defects, speech and development disorders, and lifelong disabilities.
What should have been treated as a medical crisis is being diluted into a cultural debate, with political leaders unwilling to confront the community at the heart of the problem. The result is a health system burdened with billions in avoidable costs and generations of children condemned to suffering.
The UK has a choice to make. It can continue appeasing regressive practices under the pretense of inclusivity, or it can place science and child welfare above political correctness. Protecting cultural identity should never come at the cost of public health. Britain’s silence on cousin marriages is not just cultural sensitivity it is complicity.
