A stunned BBC studio fell silent as Anouska De Georgiou’s voice quivered with resolve in her June 5, 2025, interview with Victoria Derbyshire on BBC Newsnight, becoming the first British Epstein survivor to publicly honor Virginia Giuffre’s legacy.

De Georgiou, a former model trafficked by Epstein in the early 2000s, spoke with unflinching courage: “Virginia was the bravest—she named Andrew, Maxwell, the network, knowing the cost,” she said, eyes glistening. “She toppled a prince with her truth in Nobody’s Girl. Her suicide April 25 broke us, but her legacy? It’s our fight now.”
The studio hushed as De Georgiou described her own abuse—lured at 18 with modeling promises, assaulted on Epstein’s island and in New York, Maxwell present and directing. “Virginia’s memoir gave me strength to speak,” she whispered, voice quivering yet resolute. “She carried our pain until it crushed her. We honor her by demanding unredacted files—no more protection for elites.”
Derbyshire’s questions—on Andrew’s title loss and file delays—met De Georgiou’s fire: “Virginia’s truth lives. Let it burn brighter.” The interview, amid Epstein Files Transparency Act pressure (deadline December 19), trended #AnouskaForVirginia with 3.5 million posts (82% supportive).
De Georgiou’s quivering resolve—raw, unbreakable—ensured Giuffre’s silenced legacy found Britain’s loudest stage, the first public honor from a fellow survivor turning grief into defiance.
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