The film was due to be broadcast in May 2004. The
British National Party (BNP) shared the video on its website, falsely calling it a "BNP party political broadcast" ahead of
local and
European elections.
West Yorkshire Police warned Channel 4 that the film could provoke racial violence in Bradford, which had experienced
race riots in 2001. Channel 4, which according to
The Guardian "normally takes great pride in its reputation for stirring up controversy", postponed the broadcast due to "exceptional circumstances". The BNP based its actual election broadcast on the issues brought up by the film. This broadcast was only shown on
Five, and in a highly censored form. The
BBC showed a separate BNP broadcast, due to insisting that it had to be on issues relevant to the European elections. The Black Information Link (Blink), run by
The 1990 Trust, campaigned for the rescheduled broadcast on 26 August 2004 to be pulled. Blink felt that the racial situation in Bradford had become worse since the elections. Channel 4 said that the film was in the public interest and the police had agreed to the airing. Hall said that she was depressed by media reporting that reduced her film, which had taken two years to make, to a "BNP Sex Row Film". She said that far-right parties had taken the film to be an endorsement of their views, while the left had seen the film as racist, both of which she denied. Hall said that the BNP intervention had led to victims and their mothers being falsely accused of being party activists. ==Reception==