Muslim migrant rape gang leader convicted of 30 child rapes is freed, will not be deported
Whatever “exemption from deportation” Shabir Ahmed has should be immediately revoked. The Starmer government, however, most likely does not want to incur charges of “Islamophobia” by deporting Ahmed. And that’s why hundreds of thousands of British girls were raped in the first place.

Rochdale grooming gang leader who raped girls is released from prison as No 10 insists it is powerless to deport him
by Martin Robinson and James Fielding, Daily Mail, July 3, 2026:
The leader of the notorious Rochdale grooming gang – convicted of 30 child rapes – has been released from prison today as Downing Street still insists it is powerless to deport him from Britain.
Shabir Ahmed, 73, walked free from HMP Leeds on Thursday and is set to begin life in a bail hostel in the north of England, at an estimated cost to taxpayers of £120 a night.
He is moving in to a facility close to Rochdale, where many of his victims still live, and is wearing a GPS tag.
Ahmed – who instructed his victims to call him ‘Daddy’ – is a Pakistani national who acquired British citizenship through naturalisation. He plied girls as young as 13 with drink and drugs before ‘passing them around’ to be abused by him and eight associates.
Despite his conviction in 2012, his victims – most of them white working-class girls – have been told he cannot be deported to Pakistan because of a legal loophole.
They have also voiced fears for their safety now the Rochdale grooming gang leader is free after serving 14 years of a 19-year sentence.
The Ministry of Justice has refused to say if he is out of jail, citing ‘security reasons’, but a source told the Daily Mail: ‘Ahmed has already been released. He is in a secure placement just outside the GMP area.’
Ahmed held dual British-Pakistani citizenship and was stripped of his British citizenship following his conviction. Yet the Government insists it has no legal powers to remove him from the UK.
Prime minister-in-waiting Andy Burnham has said he will ask senior ministers to find a way to deport Ahmed, declaring that ‘nothing is off the table’.
But he was undermined by Downing Street today, where Sir Keir Starmer’s spokesman said Ahmed had an ‘exemption from deportation’ under UK law…
And you thought UK law was meant to protect the British!
Grooming survivor 'let down' by early release plan
15 hours ago
Emma Glasbey
A woman who was sexually abused as a child by groups of men in Rotherham says she feels "let down all over again" after being told two of her attackers could be eligible for early release.
Seven men were convicted of offences against Sarah Wilson and given jail sentences of between six and 25 years.
A government spokesperson said it had inherited a system "on the brink of collapse" and had been forced to take action, saying "failing to act would mean prisons running out of space".
Sarah said her mental health had deteriorated since she received a letter from the Prison and Probation Service in June, informing her about the changes to the law in September.
"I'm not eating and I'm struggling to communicate with family because my head is in bits," she told the BBC.
"Survivors have not put all of our determination, our hard work and our trauma on the line for our offenders to walk free after a few years. Where is the justice in that?"
The Sentencing Act 2026 includes a wide range of measures which the government hopes will ease overcrowding in prisons.
The changes mean that, depending on the type of sentence, some offenders will serve just 33% of their sentence in prison, rather than 40% or 50% and others will serve 50%, down from 67%.

Sarah was 11 when men began grooming and abusing her in 2003, giving her food, drinks and cigarettes before sexually assaulting her.
"I was targeted when I was 11 years old, not long before my 12th birthday; I was actually targeted on my school playground," she said.
"I was abused until I was 16, I was trafficked up and down the country and it changed me in ways where I was angry with the world."
Since 2024, Sarah has given evidence in three separate trials at Sheffield Crown Court, with the most recent case ending in February 2026.
"Since February, I thought this is my break," she said. "I've had major heart surgery and had to recover from that, and then I get this letter."
She said she had since been contacted by a victim support officer, explaining two of her abusers - Obaidullah Omari and Riyasth Hussain - could be eligible for earlier release.
The changes mean that, depending on the type of sentence, some offenders will serve just 33% of their sentence in prison, rather than 40% or 50% and others will serve 50%, down from 67%.
Sarah was 11 when men began grooming and abusing her in 2003, giving her food, drinks and cigarettes before sexually assaulting her.
"I was targeted when I was 11 years old, not long before my 12th birthday; I was actually targeted on my school playground," she said.
"I was abused until I was 16, I was trafficked up and down the country and it changed me in ways where I was angry with the world."
Since 2024, Sarah has given evidence in three separate trials at Sheffield Crown Court, with the most recent case ending in February 2026.
"Since February, I thought this is my break," she said. "I've had major heart surgery and had to recover from that, and then I get this letter."
She said she had since been contacted by a victim support officer, explaining two of her abusers - Obaidullah Omari and Riyasth Hussain - could be eligible for earlier release.


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