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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...

French Border Police Never Heard of Anguilla — A Shocking Oversight

 

By Tracyann Dunkley | Travel Advise

A British Overseas Territories Citizen travelling to France on an Anguilla-issued passport was recently subjected to an astonishing display of ignorance by French border police. Upon presenting the passport, the officer not only questioned its legitimacy but outright claimed he had never heard of Anguilla, suggesting the document might be fake. This wasn’t a minor misunderstanding—it was a direct accusation against a lawful traveller holding a valid British passport.

What makes this even more absurd is Anguilla’s proximity to Saint Martin, a French overseas territory. One would expect French immigration officials to be at least vaguely aware of the geography of their own overseas holdings and the neighbouring islands. Instead, the officer appeared completely unaware that Anguilla exists, let alone that it is a British Overseas Territory with its own passport issued under the authority of the United Kingdom.

The situation escalated to the point where the passenger had to ask the officer to Google Anguilla and its relationship to Britain. Only after this impromptu geography lesson did the officer begin to grasp the legitimacy of the passport. It’s frankly embarrassing that a border agent had to be educated by a civilian on basic international relations and passport recognition.

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This incident raises serious questions about the training and competence of border officials in one of Europe’s most visited countries. If a British Overseas Territories passport can be dismissed as fake simply because the issuing territory isn’t well-known, what does that say about the integrity of the border process? Anguilla may be small, but it is part of Britain. Its citizens deserve the same respect and recognition as any other British national.

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The idea that a legitimate passport could be treated with suspicion purely due to ignorance is not just offensive—it’s dangerous. It undermines the rights of BOTC citizens and exposes a troubling blind spot in European border awareness. France needs to do better.

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