Seven men
who groomed vulnerable girls in Rochdale guilty of multiple sex offences
Jury
returned unanimous guilty verdicts for 50 offences committed by the men between
2001 and 2006
Mark Brown
North of England correspondent
Fri 13 Jun
2025 14.46 BST
Seven men
who groomed two vulnerable teenage girls in Rochdale and treated them as “sex
slaves” have been found guilty of multiple sex offences.
A
long-running trial in Manchester heard that the men subjected the girls to
years of misery and expected them to have sex with them “whenever and wherever
they wanted”.
Both girls
had “deeply troubled home lives” and were given drugs, alcohol, cigarettes,
places to stay and people to be with, a jury heard. The crimes took place in
filthy flats, on rancid mattresses, in cars, car parks, alleyways, disused
warehouses and on moors, the court was told.
The
prosecutor Rossano Scamardella KC told a jury at Manchester Minshull Street
crown court that the crimes happened “under the noses of social workers and
others who should have done far more to protect them”.
After a
four-month trial and three weeks of deliberation a jury on Friday returned
unanimous guilty verdicts for 50 offences committed between 2001 and 2006.
After the
verdicts DCI Guy Laycock, the senior investigating officer on the case, paid
tribute to the survivors, known throughout the trial as girl A and girl B.
“They have
been pivotal in bringing these abusers to long-awaited justice by bravely
giving painful and difficult testimony during a four-month trial,” he said.
“Without them this would not be possible and today is about them.
“These seven
men preyed on vulnerability for their own depraved sexual gain. The men abused,
degraded and then discarded the victims when they were just children. This
horrific abuse knew no limits, despite their denials throughout this lengthy
investigation and court case.
“They had a
callous disregard for these women when they were girls, and continue to show no
remorse for their unforgivable actions all these years later.”
Three of the
abusers, Mohammed Zahid, 64, Mushtaq Ahmed, 67, and Kasir Bashir, 50 – all born
in Pakistan – were stallholders at Rochdale’s indoor market.
Zahid, a
father of three who was known as Boss or Bossman, gave free underwear from his
lingerie stall to both girls, as well as money, alcohol and food and in return
expected them to have regular sex with him and his friends.
Zahid was
jailed for five years in 2016 as part of an earlier grooming gang case. He was
found guilty of sexual assault of a child after he engaged in sexual activity
in 2006 with a 15-year-old girl who he met when she visited his stall to buy
tights for school.
Bashir did
not attend the 2025 trial and jurors were ordered not to speculate why. It can
be revealed that he absconded while on bail before the trial began.
It can also
be reported that co-defendants Mohammed Shahzad, 44, Naheem Akram, 48, and
Nisar Hussain, 41, had their bail revoked and were remanded in custody in
January before the jury was sworn in.
Police
received intelligence that the three Rochdale-born taxi drivers were planning
to leave the UK and had paid a deposit for their transport, the court heard.
All three
denied the accusation but the judge Jonathan Seely said the court was not
prepared to take the risk that they too would abscond.
A seventh
defendant, Pakistani-born Roheez Khan, 39, was also convicted in a previous
Rochdale grooming trial. In 2013 he was one of five men convicted of sexually
exploiting a “profoundly vulnerable” 15-year-old girl in 2008 and 2009. He was
jailed for six-and-a-half years for engaging in sexual activity with a child
and witness intimidation.
Girl A told
the jury she could have been targeted by more than 200 offenders but said
“there was that many it was hard to keep count”.
The trial
heard that social workers in Rochdale had labelled girl B a “prostitute” from
the age of 10.
Giving
evidence, she said social workers raised concerns with her that she may be
having sex with Asian men. “They said I was a prostitute. I was prostituting
myself … I don’t remember them being concerned enough to do anything about it.
“I remember
knowing that they knew what was going on.”
All the
perpetrators were prosecuted as part of Operation Lytton, an investigation that
has been running since 2015 by Greater Manchester police into non-recent child
sexual exploitation in Rochdale.
Thirty-seven
individuals have been charged so far, with five more trials scheduled to take
place from September onwards.

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