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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...

“From Freedom to Firearm: Mavado’s Son Dantay Brooks Can’t Seem to Dodge Trouble—Is It Time for a Proper Kunk?”

Just months after clawing his way out of a life sentence, Dantay Brooks—son of dancehall titan David “Mavado” Brooks—is back in the headlines for all the wrong reasons. The ink barely dry on his overturned murder conviction, Dantay now faces fresh charges of unlawful wounding, assault at common law, and possession of a prohibited weapon stemming from a July incident in Cassava Piece. The same gritty Kingston community that birthed his father’s legacy is now threatening to bury his son’s future. It’s a bitter dĂ©jĂ  vu that raises the question: is this just bad luck, or is Dantay writing his own tragic script?

Dantay Brookes upon his release in March 2025

Meanwhile, Mavado, who only recently returned to Jamaican soil after years in exile, is poised to reclaim his throne on the dancehall stage. But just as the Gully Gad prepares to reignite his career, his son’s legal woes threaten to cast a long, dark shadow over his comeback. 

Is Dantay sabotaging not just himself, but his father’s long-awaited redemption arc? Or is this a generational curse playing out in real time? Either way, the timing couldn’t be worse. The streets are whispering, and the whispers are turning into roars—“Di bwoy need a proper kunk!” (Translation: The boy needs a serious wake-up call to set him straight).

YouTuber Terro Don gives his take: explicit language used 

In a culture where legacy is everything, Dantay’s actions feel like a slap in the face to the very foundation his father bled to build. Is it rebellion, recklessness, or just the weight of a name too heavy to carry? The Brooks saga is starting to read like a Shakespearean tragedy set to a dancehall riddim. And if Dantay doesn’t wise up soon, he might not just be burning his own future—he could be torching the bridge back home for his father too.

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