"I wish I had a childhood. Justice won’t ever make me feel better. Your thoughts last forever.” This was the haunting, heartbreaking final piece of testimony in The Betrayed Girls (BBC One) – a brilliant but gruelling feature-length documentary about the Rochdale abuse scandal.

Director Henry Singer’s sombre film told the decade-long story via the anonymous accounts of victims who had never been given a voice before, alongside interviews with people who spoke out on their behalf – the likes of lead investigator DC Maggie Oliver and sexual health worker Sara Rowbotham, whose heroic efforts were dramatised this spring in superlative BBC series Three Girls.