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Why Britain Cannot Deport Rochdale Grooming Gang Leader Shabir Ahmed — Even After Stripping His Citizenship

A legal loophole from 1971 means the ringleader of the Rochdale child grooming gang, released eight years early and rejected by Pakistan, must remain on UK streets under taxpayer‑funded monitoring. Share The release of Shabir Ahmed, the ringleader of the Rochdale grooming gang, has sent a shockwave through communities across the UK. Ahmed, now in his seventies, walked out of prison around eight years earlier than the full length of his sentence , despite being convicted of some of the most brutal child sexual offences ever brought before a British court. He was supposed to serve decades. Instead, he is back on British streets under licence, fitted with a GPS tag and placed under curfew, but undeniably free. Shabir Ahmed, and Adil Khan, lost their bid to keep British citizenship after a failed 2017 appeal, yet Ahmed was still released in 2026 despite Pakistan refusing to take him back. Full story and image credit: BBC News . For many, the most disturb...

US President Donald Trump Blames Autism on Tylenol — Is This Science or Scapegoating


By Tracyann Dunkley 

Just when you thought the news cycle couldn’t get more surreal, a Washington Post report suggests Trump administration officials are preparing to announce a link between Tylenol and autism risk. Yes, the same over-the-counter painkiller routinely recommended to pregnant women. This move flies in the face of longstanding medical guidelines and could ignite a firestorm of fear, misinformation, and finger-pointing — especially among expectant parents already navigating a minefield of conflicting advice.

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The announcement was teased at Charlie Kirk’s memorial, where President Trump declared, “I think we found an answer to autism… We won’t let it happen anymore”, calling it “one of the most important news conferences I’ll ever have”. The timing, the setting, the drama — it’s all deeply political. And while some hail it as a breakthrough, others see it as a dangerous detour from evidence-based medicine. No new peer-reviewed studies have emerged, yet the administration is reportedly urging pregnant women to avoid Tylenol unless they have a fever.

For parents of autistic children, this news doesn’t just rattle—it reopens wounds. Many have spent years navigating guilt, blame, and the exhausting search for answers. To hear a world leader claim “we found an answer” at a funeral, without scientific backing, feels like salt in old scars. Is this a breakthrough or a betrayal? For some, it sparks hope. For others, it reeks of false promises and political theatre. And for every mother who’s ever asked, “Did I do something wrong?”, this announcement risks reigniting shame that should never have been theirs to carry.

So here we are again: science, grief, and ideology colliding in the public square. If Tylenol is suddenly cast as a villain, what does that say about the trust we place in medical institutions — or the governments that claim to protect us? Is this about safeguarding lives, or rewriting narratives to suit an agenda?

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