UK to change law in bid to deport grooming gang ringleader
The UK government plans to change immigration law to enable the deportation of serious foreign criminals, specifically citing the case of Shabir Ahmed, a convicted child sex offender and grooming gang leader. Ahmed, who was jailed in 2012 for 22 years for offenses including rape, was released on license earlier this month.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe UK government plans to change immigration law to enable the deportation of serious foreign criminals, specifically citing the case of Shabir Ahmed, a convicted child sex offender and grooming gang leader. Ahmed, who was jailed in 2012 for 22 years for offenses including rape, was released on license earlier this month. Although stripped of his British citizenship, a 1971 immigration law has prevented his deportation because he arrived in Britain before 1973 and holds Pakistani nationality. Interior minister Shabana Mahmood announced that an amendment to the Immigration and Asylum Bill will grant the Home Secretary new powers to override this specific section of the 1971 act for serious offenders. This legislative change aims to ensure that individuals like Ahmed can be deported after serving their sentences.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe proposed amendment will provide the Home Secretary new power to disapply Section 7 of the Immigration Act 1971 for serious criminals.
A 1971 immigration law prevents the deportation of Commonwealth nationals who arrived before 1973.
Ahmed was stripped of his British citizenship and left with Pakistani nationality.
Shabir Ahmed was jailed in 2012 for 22 years for child sexual offenses including rape.
UK plans to change law to deport a convicted paedophile who led a grooming gang after his prison release.