Burnham calls for grooming gang ringleader to be deported
2 days
ago
Joshua
Nevett
Political
reporter
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0jy53n8q1do
Shabir
Ahmed was the head of a gang which abused girls as young as 12
Andy
Burnham has said he will ask the home and foreign secretaries to "review
all possible options" to deport the ringleader of a notorious Rochdale
grooming gang.
Shabir
Ahmed is due to be released from jail this week, after being convicted for
multiple counts of rape and sexual offences against girls in 2012.
Ahmed had
dual British-Pakistani citizenship and was stripped of his British citizenship
following his conviction.
The Home
Office said it was working with other government departments to explore options
in the case.
Burnham,
who is widely expected to succeed Sir Keir Starmer as prime minister later this
month, said he wanted to see Ahmed removed from the country.
But
documents shared online, reportedly from the Probation Service, say Ahmed
cannot be deported back to Pakistan because of a law that bars his removal.
Ahmed's
victims have said they fear for their safety ahead of his expected release from
jail.
In a post
on X, Burnham wrote: "Like everyone, I want this vile criminal out of the
country. Victims must come first.
"I
will ask the home and foreign secretaries to review all possible options - and
they should consider nothing is off the table."
In
response, a spokesperson for the Home Office said: "We are committed to
doing everything possible to deport FNOs [foreign national offenders] and are
clear they should have no place in this country."
"As
previous governments have found, this necessarily involves the agreement of the
receiving country, which has not always been possible.
"But
we are currently working with colleagues across government to explore all
possible options in this case."
In 2022,
when Burnham was mayor of Greater Manchester, he called on the Conservative
government "to do everything" within its power to deport grooming
gang members.
Earlier
on Wednesday, Justice Minister Jake Richards told the BBC's Politics Live there
were long-standing issues with "our ability to deport foreign national
offenders to Pakistan".
"We
need to try and work on that and see whether it's possible, but in this case,
it seems unlikely," Richards said.
When
asked if the law should be changed to allow the deportation of the Ahmed,
Richards said: "I think it's very difficult to change the law to look
retrospectively."
But he
added he was "absolutely looking at this individual and if he is to be
released from prison, looking at what we are doing to ensure, firstly, to look
after his victims and keeping the community safe".
One
victim, identified only as "Ruby", is being supported by The Maggie
Oliver Foundation, set up by Maggie Oliver, an ex-police detective turned
whistleblower over grooming gangs.
In a
statement, Ruby said: "I'm scared for my safety and my kids' safety.
"The
main ringleader is getting out of prison, who is well known in Rochdale, Oldham
and Middleton, so even if he's not in that area, he still knows people and has
a chance to talk to people from that area and that makes me unsafe."
Oliver
told BBC Newsnight Ruby is "quite rightly scared, but feels that she is
once again an afterthought".
The Home
Office has previously said Ahmed's crimes were "appalling" and that
he would be subject to stringent licence conditions upon his release from
prison.
Ahmed
must initially live in supervised accommodation 24/7 and will be subject to an
"exclusion zone" centred on Rochdale.
The
papers published online said Ahmed cannot be deported back to Pakistan because
of provisions under the Immigration Act 1971.
The act
says because Ahmed arrived in the UK before 1973 and lived in the country for
at least five years before his deportation was considered, his removal is
barred.
Ahmed was
jailed for 19 years in 2012 at Liverpool Crown Court, one of nine men in the
Rochdale grooming gang trial convicted of offences against five girls.
Police
said as many as 50 girls could have been victims of the gang, and that many of
them had come from "chaotic", "council estate" backgrounds.
Judge
Gerald Clifton said victims were treated "as though they were worthless
and beyond any respect" because they were not part of the gang's community
or religion.
Greater
Manchester Police said at the time there was no "racial or cultural"
element to the crimes.
A report
later found that police had not acted despite multiple concerns being raised.
It said there had been "serious multiple failures" by police and
local authorities.

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