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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...

Life‑Shaping Sentences in Anguilla — But Does Cracking Down Matter If the Criminals Aren’t Being Caught?


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Anguilla has delivered a strong message on justice and public safety following the conclusion of two high‑profile criminal cases, resulting in lengthy prison sentences for murder and firearms offences. On 13 January 2026, the High Court imposed significant custodial sentences, reinforcing the territory’s zero‑tolerance stance on violent crime. The rulings underscore Anguilla’s commitment to upholding the rule of law and protecting its communities — an issue increasingly relevant to UK audiences with deep historical and constitutional ties to the Overseas Territory.


The decisions also raise uncomfortable questions that many in Anguilla and the diaspora are now openly asking.  Does cracking down on gun crime through harsh sentencing make sense if the majority of violent offenders are never actually caught? How effective is a justice system that delivers long sentences for the few, while 11 murders in 2025 remain unsolved on an island of just about 15,000 people?

Anguilla Bets on New Forensic Provider and Expanded CCTV in 2026 — Commissioner Confident Justice Will Come for 2025’s Unsolved Killings

For a tourism‑dependent island, eleven unsolved killings in a single year is not just alarming — it’s destabilising. It raises the possibility that criminals may be outsmarting law enforcement, operating with a level of confidence that suggests they do not fear being identified, arrested, or prosecuted.

Anguilla's first unsolved homicide of 2026. Victim Named: Clashawn Gumbs: Anguilla’s Second Murder of the Year Raises Urgent CCTV Questions

This concern deepened when Commissioner of Police Robert Clark confirmed that many of the island’s violent crimes are being committed with the same weapons, which could possibly be circulating hand‑to‑hand across the island. If the firearm is known to be in active circulation, the public is left wondering:

Why can’t they be traced?
Why can’t they be intercepted?
How can illegal weapons move so freely on such a small island?

Commissioner Clarks Message is clear: “I need the public to tell me where the weapons are... I will go and get them.”

While the justice system celebrates these convictions, the public is left grappling with a deeper issue: Can sentencing alone restore safety if the majority of killers remain unidentified, and if illegal firearms continues to circulate freely across the island? 



Could it be that many people are torn? Some may want to protect a relative, a friend, or even a partner whose actions they’re aware of, while others fear the police cannot be trusted. With so many officers related to victims or suspects, should Anguilla consider recruiting police from outside the island to ensure neutrality — or when loyalties collide, what truly comes first: family or the law. 

Tourism is Anguilla’s economic powerhouse, making up over 70% of the island’s entire economy, with the services sector accounting for 73% of GDP

One thing the people of Anguilla must consider is this: in the long run, what happens to the island’s livelihood if it becomes too unsafe for residents to move freely or for tourists to visit without fear. At some point, silence becomes part of the problem.  This is the moment for the public to step forward — to speak up, to share what they know, and to help reclaim the safety of the island they love.

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