Rees-Mogg criticises barriers to deporting convicted Commonwealth citizens
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The segment features Jacob Rees-Mogg discussing the impending release of Shabir Ahmed, ringleader of the Rochdale grooming gang, after serving 14 years of a 22-year sentence. It details how Ahmed's British citizenship was revoked yet he cannot be deported due to a 1971 legal exemption for certain long-resident Commonwealth citizens. Rees-Mogg links the case to wider failures in controlling small boat arrivals, asylum processing, costs and criminal removals, blaming the Human Rights Act and ECHR for preventing action. He calls for Parliament to assert sovereignty and remove such offenders. The piece draws on the Ahmed case, general migration statistics and a recent unnamed report on unemployment rates among asylum seekers.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately conveys the facts of Ahmed's conviction, release timeline and the specific 1971 Act exemption confirmed in official guidance and contemporaneous coverage. Framing presents the exemption as an unintended loophole protecting serious criminals, which aligns with its historical purpose for pre-1973 residents but correctly notes its application here. Unsupported elements include the precise £17,000 per-person cost figure and the 'yesterday' 75% unemployment report, which do not match readily available official or Migration Observatory data; asylum support costs vary significantly by accommodation type. Viewer perception may be skewed by omission of deportation barriers under human rights law beyond the 1971 Act or successful removals of other offenders. The commentary is consistent with GB News editorial line but relies primarily on the presenter's assertions rather than new primary documents.
Key Moments
Shabir Ahmed convicted of multiple rapes, sentenced to 22 years, served 14, citizenship cancelled but cannot be deported
Confirmed by Manchester Evening News, GB News reporting and court records; release around 2 July 2026
1971 Immigration Act Section 7 exempts qualifying pre-1973 Commonwealth citizens from deportation
Explicit in UK legislation.gov.uk and Home Office guidance on conducive grounds deportation
Asylum seekers cost £17,000 each and 75% remain unemployed per recent report
No matching primary figure or dated report found; support rates ~£49/week cash plus variable accommodation costs
Human Rights Act and ECHR prevent removal of criminal migrants
Common factor in some cases but the Ahmed exemption stems directly from 1971 Act, not ECHR
Notable Concerns
- Unverified specific cost and employment statistics presented without sourcing
Sources Consulted
- Immigration Act 1971 Section 7
- Deportation on conducive grounds - GOV.UK
- 'Deport him': Father of Rochdale grooming gang victim urges Government to kick vile ringleader 'Daddy' out of UK
- Rochdale rape gang ringleader cannot be deported due to loophole
- Asylum support: What you'll get - GOV.UK
- Asylum accommodation in the UK - Migration Observatory