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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...

Shenseea Is Redefining Dancehall: New Hits, Global Records, and Unmatched Resilience

Shenseea’s rise isn’t just a success story, it’s a seismic shift in dancehall culture. She stepped into an industry where women were often sidelined, underestimated, or boxed into narrow expectations, yet she refused to shrink herself to fit anyone’s comfort. Once viewed as a minority voice in a male‑dominated space, she bulldozed her way into the centre, transforming herself into a powerhouse whose every release sends shockwaves through the genre. Her new anthems Talk To Mi Nuh and her explosive feature with Vybz Kartel on Panic prove she’s not here to participate — she’s here to dominate.

Her journey hasn’t been smooth, and that’s exactly what makes her triumph gravitational. Losing her mother, her anchor, her biggest cheerleader, could have broken her. Instead, it ignited something fierce. Shenseea didn’t crumble; she recalibrated. She channelled the pain into purpose, the grief into grit, and the heartbreak into hunger. Every milestone she hits now carries the weight of that loss, but also the strength she built from surviving it.

And she’s not doing this for herself alone. She goes hard for her son, Rajeiro, whose name she carries like a badge of honour. He’s her why, her fuel, her reminder that every barrier she breaks widens the path for him too. That fire shows in her work ethic,  relentless, unapologetic, unmatched. 

Shenseea steps boldly into her new era, evolving from Romeich Entertainment’s breakout star to a global force under Sony Music — a move that cemented her status as one of dancehall’s most unstoppable powerhouses: Image Credit: Shenseea's Vevo

Her Sony Music single Boss Up has already racked up over 5 million views, a testament to her global pull and her refusal to let anyone dictate her ceiling.

Whether critics want to admit it or not, Shenseea is stamping her legacy into dancehall with no permission slips, no apologies, and no brakes. She’s rewriting the rules, redefining the genre’s future, and proving that her success isn’t a fluke, it’s the result of raw talent, unshakeable resilience, and a vision too big to be contained. She’s killing it, and the world is finally catching up.

Listen Panic, her feature with Vybz Kartel: Click or watch below.


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