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Government 'cannot deport' grooming gang ringleader
Image source, GMP Image caption, Shabir Ahmed was the head of a gang which abused girls as young as 12 Published 32 minutes ago The ringleader of a notorious Rochdale grooming gang is set to be released from jail this week and cannot be deported, his victims have been told. Shabir Ahmed, 73, known to his victims as "Daddy", had dual British-Pakistani citizenship but was stripped of the former following his conviction in 2012 for multiple counts of rape and sexual offences against girls. Documents shared online, reportedly from the Probation Service to one of his victims, state that he will be released on Thursday. The Home Office 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 due to 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. 'Violent bully' In 2022, Andy Burnham, likely to succeed Sir Keir Starmer as prime minister, called on the Conservative government "to do everything within [its] power" to deport members of grooming gangs. Paul Waugh, MP for Rochdale, told The Daily Telegraph: "The people of Rochdale want him booted out of the country and it's simply unacceptable that the government of Pakistan are refusing to take him back. "If the Citizenship Act needs to be amended to do that, ministers should look at doing just that." For two years from early 2008, girls as young as 12 were plied with alcohol and drugs, gang-raped in rooms above takeaway shops and ferried to different flats in taxis where cash was paid to use the girls for sex. Ahmed was described in court as a "violent, hypocritical bully". At his trial, he called the judge a "racist" and took his case to the European Court of Human Rights, claiming he had not received a fair trial. 'Multiple failures' He 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. Ahmed's case follows a similar legal battle by two other gang members, Qari Abdul Rauf and Adil Khan. Both were stripped of t