logo
Moment Asian Rochdale sex groomers turn on each other: Paedophiles who raped teenage girls nearly come to blows in police station as they blame each other

Moment Asian Rochdale sex groomers turn on each other: Paedophiles who raped teenage girls nearly come to blows in police station as they blame each other

Daily Mail​2 days ago

This is the shocking moment two members of a vile Rochdale grooming gang that exploited two young girls as sex slaves turned on each other in a police station.
Naheem Akram, 48, and Nisar Hussain, 41, came close to trading blows as they blamed each other for being part of the Asian gang that raped teenage girls.
The pair were both being questioned at Bury police station in 2017 over the serious sexual assault of one of the victims, known as Girl A, when when the fight broke out.
Former taxi driver Akram, who was accused of raping and abusing the girl, pointed at Hussain and called him a grass, before trying to punch him.
Hussian, who filmed a video of the same teenager being abused, later confirmed to police he had been assaulted but decided not to prosecute.
Minshull Street Crown Court heard that the police's interview with Akram took a 'significant turn' as he was being released.
Describing the incident, prosecutor Rossano Scamardella KC told the hearing: 'As that process was ongoing, Mr Akram started to lose his cool with the officers in the area with him.
'He began shouting that they had got it all wrong and that they were not doing their job properly. But in the same area of the police station, also being interviewed that day was Nisar Hussain.
This is the shocking moment two members of a vile Rochdale grooming gang that exploited two young girls as sex slaves turned on each other in a police station
Naheem Akram, 48, (left) and Nisar Hussain, 41, (right) came close to trading blows as they blamed each other for being part of the Asian gang that raped teenage girls
'Mr Akram saw him and shouted, 'there was four people in that car and it was not me or Shahzad, it was f****** him' and he pointed at Nisar Hussain and called him a "grass".'
'As the two men got closer to each other, Mr Akram began trying to punch Mr Hussain,' the KC added.
Police released CCTV footage of the assault today after all seven members of the grooming gang were convicted of exploiting two young girls as 'sex slaves'.
The gang preyed on the vulnerabilities of the victims to groom them from the age of 13 over a five-year-long campaign of abuse between 2001 and 2006.
Both girls had 'deeply troubled home lives' and were given drugs, alcohol, cigarette, places to stay and people to be with, Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court heard.
They were expected to have sex 'whenever and wherever' the defendants and other men wanted in filthy flats, on rancid mattresses, in cars, car parks, alleyways and disused warehouses.
Jurors deliberated for three weeks before delivering their unanimous guilty verdicts on Friday.
Three of the abusers, Mohammed Zahid, 64, Mushtaq Ahmed, 67, and Kasir Bashir, 50, - all born in Pakistan - were stallholders on Rochdale's indoor market.
The gang's depraved ringleader Zahid was even known as 'Knickerman' because of his underwear stall at the centuries-old trading hub.
The pot-bellied, wispy-haired father-of-three exploited his products' appeal to young girls to lure in vulnerable youngsters who were then subjected to 'years of misery'.
Top row, left to right: Kasir Bashir, Mohammed Shahzad; middle row, left to right: Mushtaq Ahmed, Roheez Khan; bottom row, left to right: Naheem Akram, Nisar Hussain
In 2016, Zahid was jailed for five years in an earlier grooming gang case after he engaged in sexual activity in 2006 with a 15-year-old girl who he met when she visited his stall to buy tights for school.
Bashir did not attend the current trial as jurors were ordered not to speculate why but it can be revealed that he absconded while on bail before the trial got under way.
It can also be reported that co-defendants Mohammed Shahzad, 44, Naheem Akram, 48, and Nisar Hussain, 41, were remanded in custody with their bail revoked in January before the jury was sworn in.
A seventh defendant, Pakistani-born Roheez Khan, 39, also featured in another previous Rochdale grooming trial in 2013 when he was one of five men convicted of sexually exploiting a 'profoundly vulnerable' 15-year-old girl in 2008 and 2009.
Khan was jailed for six-and-a-half years for engaging in sexual activity with a child and witness intimidation.
Starting when they were aged just 13, two terrified girls were 'passed around' for sex between fellow traders and taxi drivers – all from Rochdale's Pakistani community - between 2001 and 2006.
They would then be callously 'discarded', jurors in a ten-week trial heard.
Following a string of successful prosecutions which made the Greater Manchester town grimly synonymous with the scourge of grooming gangs, the victims – now in their 30s – decided to come forward to seek justice over their ordeals.
In harrowing detail, one described her terror as she was raped by 'massive' and 'aggressive' paedophile.
Heartbreakingly it also heard how the girl - at the time living in a children's home - was scandalously dismissed by social workers as having been 'prostituting' herself from the age of ten.
As the pair's abusers now face lengthy prison terms, it can be revealed that two – including Zahid, who also used the nickname 'Bossman' - have already spent time behind bars over Rochdale child sex rings.
Jurors also weren't told that the three British-born members of the gang were locked up partway through the trial following 'intelligence' that they planned to flee to Pakistan.
A fourth skipped bail as the case got underway and was tried in his absence - his whereabouts are unknown.
They are the first Asian grooming gang to be brought to justice since Labour faced accusations of a cover-up for resisting calls for a public inquiry into how a generation of girls were betrayed by police and social services.
And today the Conservatives renewed their calls for the national inquiry to take place.
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'The crimes committed by these men are sickening. Their victims were raped and abused for years, and the youngest was just 13 years old.
'It should not have taken 20 years to get these convictions.
The gang's convictions in full
Mohammed Zahid was convicted of ten counts of rape; four counts of indecency with a child; five counts of procuring a girl under 21 to have unlawful sexual intercourse; and one count of attempt to procure a girl under 21 to have unlawful sexual intercourse.
Kasir Bashir was convicted of two counts of rape; and two counts of indecency with a child.
Mushtaq Ahmed was convicted of four counts of rape; four counts of indecency with a child; and one count of procuring a girl under 21 to have unlawful sexual intercourse.
Roheez Khan was convicted of one count of rape.
Mohammed Shahzad was convicted of five counts of rape; and one count of assault by penetration.
Nisar Hussain was convicted of two counts of rape; and one count of assault by penetration.
Naheem Akram was convicted of six counts of rape; and one count of assault by penetration
'Not a single person in authority has ever been held to account for covering up crimes like these, and for ignoring the victims.
'It's time for a national statutory inquiry to get to the truth about the cover ups. I will push this to a vote in Parliament next Wednesday - but so far Labour has refused to have one, which simply continues the cover up. If they vote against a proper inquiry next week, it will be a day of shame for Labour.'
According to one estimate, upwards of 250,000 girls have been attacked repeatedly by street gangs in 50 British towns and cities over the past 40 years.
Today's convictions represent the eighth time that a group of men of mainly Pakistani heritage have been convicted of grooming girls for sex in Rochdale in the early 2000s.
The court previously heard that 'if a man wanted sex with a young girl, he would pay Zahid a modest sum of money and a girl would be supplied'.
'That's how it worked in Rochdale,' prosecutor Rossano Scamardella KC added.
Girls would meet up with groups of Asian men in parks, woods, on the moors and at a snooker hall.
They would be given alcohol, cigarettes and drugs and driven around and taken to flats and houses, with the abuse also taking place in cars, alleyways or disused warehouses
Pakistan-born Zahid has previously been jailed for sexual activity with a child over a previous Rochdale grooming case – jurors in the latest trial were told that the 64-year-old had previously been to prison 'for sexual offending'.
Zahid cynically targeted youngsters shopping for underwear, identifying those with troubled backgrounds living in children's homes or foster care.
Under the guise of 'work experience', he encouraged two 13-year-olds to hang around his stall at Rochdale's indoor market and that run by another perverted trader, Kasir Bashir.
Bashir skipped bail at the outset of his trial but the case proceeded in his absence.
Rochdale is now not synonymous with the great achievements of the Industrial Revolution but with what has become known as Asian grooming gangs, the men's trial heard
Once trading had finished for the day, the grotesque pair would take the stock to a nearby shop, Maria Fashions, then run by another paedophile, co-defendant Mushtaq Ahmed.
Already duped by Zahid's superficially friendly manner and the offer of small amounts of cash or free underwear, the girls would naively agree to enter the store's dingy cellar.
Here they would strip off and wait to be joined by men who raped and sexually assaulted them on a filthy mattress.
Trapped by an uncaring system which treated underage abuse victims as 'prostitutes', it was the start of a nightmarish descent into being used as 'sex slaves'.
Afterwards they would be 'discarded… like rubbish', jurors were told.
Mr Scamardella told jurors that between 2001 and 2006, both victims' lives were 'destroyed by these men and others like them'.
'They both endured years of misery being sexually abused by almost every man with which they came into contact.'
He added that the abuse had taken place 'under the noses of social workers and others who should have done far more to protect them'.
Bashir's whereabouts are unknown – he answered bail in the run-up to the men's trial, but vanished when it started back in January.
Like Zahid and former shopkeeper Ahmed he was born in Pakistan, as was fellow gang member Roheez Khan.
The other three convicted today - Mohammed Shazad, Nisar Hussain and Naheem Akram – were all born in Rochdale but were remanded in custody partway through following 'intelligence' that they planned to flee to Pakistan.
An eighth man was formally found not guilty on all counts partway through the trial after the prosecution said there was no longer 'a realistic prospect of conviction'.
Arfan Khan, 40, from Rochdale, had been accused of four sex offences, including two counts of rape.
All seven of those convicted today are British citizens – however any with dual nationality could potentially face proceedings to strip them of their UK passports and deport them to Pakistan when they are released from prison.
Mohammed Zahid, 64
Known as 'Bossman' to his fellow paedophiles, with his 'pot belly and wispy hair', the apparently unthreatening Zahid was mockingly dubbed 'Knickerman' by the girls whose abuse he masterminded.
Ringleader of the latest grooming gang to face justice, Pakistan-born Zahid ran an underwear stall on Rochdale market in the early 2000s.
Even experienced detectives were shocked at uncovering the extent of his depravity, branding the married father-of-three 'manipulative, controlling and clearly dangerous'.
Then in his 40s, Zahid used it to target vulnerable girls as young as 13 – earning their trust by feigning sympathy for the tough start to life they had endured.
One of the victims described him as coming across 'dead soft-natured' and 'like he actually gave a c**p' – something she had encountered all too rarely from adults in her life.
Having groomed them, Zahid would offer the girls to fellow paedophiles to sexually abuse in exchange for money.
Zahid 'led the way in Rochdale in child sexual exploitation', jurors were told.
'If a man wanted sex with a young girl, he would pay Zahid a modest sum of money and a girl would be supplied,' Rossano Scamardella KC said.
He was the only gang member accused of sexually assaulting both victims in the current trial.
Zahid was previously jailed for sexual activity with a child over an earlier Rochdale grooming trial.
Kasir Bashir, 50
A second trader at Rochdale Market, the 'massive' and 'aggressive' paedophile ran a stall selling shoes and socks.
Bashir helped Zahid groom Girl B before both abused her in the cellar beneath a nearby shop where they stored their wares overnight.
Girl B became pregnant by Bashir when she was just 14 and he was 26.
In a harrowing account, Girl B recalled being raped by a huge, bushy-haired man with an enormous stomach, massive nose and big lips when she was 13.
'He just looks aggressive,' she told a detective.
'He didn't have a soft face. It was just like stern. With him I felt like it wasn't right'.
Girl B added: 'He was heavy. I can literally feel him on top of me, even now.
'I can see him on top of me. I can see him in the corner of the room. I remember it hurting.
'He was big and so I didn't want to do it. He was the one I didn't want to be near.'
Pakistan-born Bashir answered bail in the run-up to the men's trial but vanished when it started back in January.
He was tried in his absence and branded 'a liar' by prosecutors.
Mushtaq Ahmed, 67
Ran clothing store Maria Fashion where his friends, perverted market traders Zahid and Bashir, stored their produce overnight.
Helped sexually abuse terrified girls on a dirty mattress in the cellar beneath the store, now under new ownership.
Prosecutors said Pakistan-born Ahmed was 'cunning and manipulative' and had told 'lie after lie after lie' when he reality he 'liked to have sex with children'.
One of only two members of the gang to give evidence in their defence, Ahmed said he came to Britain in 1988.
He previously ran market stalls in Rochdale, Oldham and Bradford.
Ahmed was arrested after victim Girl B spotted him selling fruit and vegetables out of a van near a school.
Roheez Khan, 39
Roheez Khan, 39
Nicknamed 'Cockeyed Taz' due to having a lazy eye, he arrived from Pakistan in 2005 and 'wasted no time' in finding girls to abuse, the trial heard.
Khan – who became part of the gang due to having a friend who worked for a taxi firm - was jailed for the abuse of a 15-year-old girl in 2013 in an unrelated case.
Girl A said she regularly had sex with Khan after meeting up while still in her school uniform.
'Like his friend Zahid, he couldn't help himself,' Mr Scamardella said.
Mohammed Shahzad, 44
Nicknamed 'Zero', the taxi driver met Girl A when she was 13 and tricked her into believing he was 'an actual friend'.
But after swapping phone numbers, he went onto have sex with her 'every week', the trial heard.
One of three gang members born in Rochdale, Shahzad was remanded in custody partway through following 'intelligence' he planned to flee to Pakistan.
Nisar Hussain, 41
Nisar Hussain, 41
Born in Rochdale, he was remanded in custody partway through following 'intelligence' he planned to flee to Pakistan.
Another taxi driver and known as Niss, he filmed Girl A being sexually abused after being plied with drugs by co-defendant Shahzad.
Naheem Akram, 48
Naheem Akram, 48
Another taxi driver, known to the victim as 'Lala', he met Girl A when co-defendant Shazad invited her to a 'sesh' and gave her Ecstasy.
Hussain filmed her being sexually abused, the trial heard.
Shahzad then blackmailed her by saying he would circulate the footage unless she had sex with him and Akram, who she branded 'horrible'.
She complied, but after raping her they cruelly shared the humiliating clip anyway, she said.
Following his arrest, Akram was caught on CCTV lashing out at co-accused Nisar Hussain and branding him a 'grass' after both were interviewed at Bury police station in February 2017.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Posters, scented items and drones: Highland hunt for teenager's missing therapy dog
Posters, scented items and drones: Highland hunt for teenager's missing therapy dog

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Posters, scented items and drones: Highland hunt for teenager's missing therapy dog

Walking along Nevis Gorge, the rumble of Steall Falls can be heard long before you see it. Rocky terrain clears to expansive grassland, forest and shrubbery. Among Glen Nevis's lush greenery, flashes of bright red paper can be seen. It is not litter left by tourists who have trekked to this beauty spot, but missing posters handed out by the family of Louie, a two-year-old golden retriever who has been missing for a fortnight. The breathtaking scenery is no longer noticed by Louie's owner, Louise Manson, and her two daughters Ellie and Lara. They have have been coming daily, sometimes several times a day, to search for their beloved dog. Louie has been on walks here regularly but on the day of his disappearance, Louise says he got spooked. 'We got to the top of the gorge and a family were there and the rain was pounding. You couldn't hear very much between the rain and the waterfall. 'The family was coming towards the car park and they had a toddler there screaming. I don't know if he got a scent of a deer but we looked down [at the lead and collar] and he was gone. 'My senses were in overdrive, for a dog it might have been a bit too much.' Louie's disappearance has been particularly difficult for 17-year-old Ellie as he provides support as a therapy dog for the teenager. Ellie has epilepsy and while Louie was originally brought into the family as a companion for her, he started to alert family members when Ellie was about to have a seizure. 'If I have a seizure he will lie in my bed across my chest or on my stomach to let me know that he's there. He'll alert someone if anything's going to happen, he can sense it. He will bang around to get anyone's attention,' she says. 'It's hard. It's odd walking into the house and he's not there.' Ellie hasn't been able to face coming to many of the searches for Louie, 'I can't really deal with the disappointment of not finding him,' she said. Louise, and Ellie's 12-year-old sister, Lara, have been doing most of the searching with help from the local community. 'If I'm not out searching I'm at home researching what I need and what to do and talking to people. People have been so generous lending us equipment. Honestly, I don't think I would have gotten through it without anybody's help.' Word has travelled around Steall Falls as while they are out searching, a walker approaches Louise to ask if she is 'Louie's mum'; she has heard the story and wants to extend her sympathy. The support has been overwhelming, she says. 'I put one post on Facebook the night he went missing and by the time I came back up here there were locals already out looking for him. Since then it's just grown.' Many of the posters stuck to trees around the area were new to Louise. She said a neighbour had been out putting them up. Volunteers have also been out searching with drones but have so far notfound anything. Another volunteer has also offered a thermal drone to try to find Louie over the weekend. It's not an easy route to search. Much of the path involves climbing over rocky terrain and the occasional trickles of water from the mountain above to the gorge below. To get to the bottom of Steall Falls, the family either wade through the shallow river or walk the tightrope chain-bridge hoping Louie will be able to pick up their scent. They were starting to lose hope after a week and a half of no sightings but last weekend a sniffer dog picked up his scent after smelling Louie's blanket. Hopes have been raised further as searchers heard barking on early Thursday morning echoing through the valley. 'I think he's gone into survival mode,' Louise says, 'When he realised nobody was here he's taken off and started fending for himself … until he gets my scent he won't come anywhere near me. Once he gets my scent and he comes closer to me apparently he will just snap out of it.' Armed with dirty clothes covered with her scent, Louise is planning to camp out at Glen Nevis this weekend close to where Louie went missing to try to lure him back. 'He's got to be somewhere,' she says. 'When he turns up it'll be amazing.'

Starmer accused of U-turn after ordering inquiry into grooming gangs
Starmer accused of U-turn after ordering inquiry into grooming gangs

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Starmer accused of U-turn after ordering inquiry into grooming gangs

Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of a U-turn after committing to a statutory inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal. After resisting pressure for months to implement a full probe, the Prime Minister said he had read 'every single word' of an independent report into child sexual exploitation by Baroness Louise Casey and would accept her recommendation for the investigation. Earlier this year, the Government dismissed calls for a public inquiry, saying its focus was on putting in place the outstanding recommendations already made in a seven-year national inquiry by Professor Alexis Jay. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described the move as a 'welcome U-turn', while Kemi Badenoch called on him to apologise for 'six wasted months'. 'Just like he dismissed concerns about the winter fuel payment and then had to U-turn, just like he needed the Supreme Court to tell him what a woman is, he had to be led by the nose to make the correct decision here,' she said. 'I've been repeatedly calling for a full national inquiry since January. It's about time he recognised he made a mistake and apologised for six wasted months.' Speaking to reporters travelling with him on his visit to Canada, the Prime Minister said: 'I have never said we should not look again at any issue. I have wanted to be assured that on the question of any inquiry. That's why I asked Louise Casey who I hugely respect to do an audit. 'Her position when she started the audit was that there was not a real need for a national inquiry over and above what was going on. 'She has looked at the material she has looked at and she has come to the view that there should be a national inquiry on the basis of what she has seen. 'I have read every single word of her report and I am going to accept her recommendation. That is the right thing to do on the basis of what she has put in her audit.' The Times newspaper reported that the findings of Baroness Casey's review will be set out in Parliament on Monday. The inquiry will be able to compel witnesses to give evidence, and it is understood that it will be national in scope, co-ordinating a series of targeted local investigations. Prof Jay's 2022 report concluded there had been institutional failings across the country and tens of thousands of victims in England and Wales. A national row over grooming gangs was ignited in January after tech billionaire Elon Musk used his X social media platform to launch a barrage of attacks on Sir Keir and safeguarding minister Jess Phillips. It followed the Government's decision to decline a request from Oldham Council for a Whitehall-led inquiry into child sexual abuse in the town. The Government later commissioned a 'rapid' audit by Lady Casey into the nature and scale of group-based child sexual abuse, which had been due to take three months but was delayed.

Keir Starmer in another U-turn with PM set to launch full national inquiry into grooming gangs after months of pressure - as Labour leader admits 'it's the right thing to do'
Keir Starmer in another U-turn with PM set to launch full national inquiry into grooming gangs after months of pressure - as Labour leader admits 'it's the right thing to do'

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Keir Starmer in another U-turn with PM set to launch full national inquiry into grooming gangs after months of pressure - as Labour leader admits 'it's the right thing to do'

Sir Keir Starmer has revealed he will launch a full national inquiry into grooming gangs after resisting pressure for months. In a major U-turn, the Prime Minister said setting up a statutory investigation into the scandal was the 'right thing to do' despite previously insisting it would take too long and that local reviews were sufficient. He dramatically changed his mind after reading 'every single word' of the report he commissioned into the exploitation of thousands of girls across the country, due to be published next week, which is said to explicitly link it to men of Pakistani origin. The audit by Whitehall troubleshooter Baroness Casey is understood to have recommended that a new national inquiry be established in order to look at the race of perpetrators. It is also expected to warn that white British girls who were exploited in towns across the country were 'institutionally ignored for fear of racism'. Speaking to reporters about Lady Casey's review, Sir Keir said: 'Her position when she started the audit was that there was not a real need for a national inquiry over and above what was going on. She has looked at the material she has looked at and she has come to the view that there should be a national inquiry on the basis of what she has seen. 'I have read every single word of her report and I am going to accept her recommendation. That is the right thing to do on the basis of what she has put in her audit. 'I asked her to do that job to double-check on this; she has done that job for me and having read her report, I respect her in any event. I shall now implement her recommendations.' Asked when it would start work, the PM replied: 'It will be statutory under the Inquiries Act. That will take a bit of time to sort out exactly how that works and we will set that out in an orderly way.' He insisted that he had never ruled out a national inquiry although he previously wanted to focus on implementing recommendations made in earlier reports. 'From the start I have always said that we should implement the recommendations we have got because we have got many other recommendations. I think there are 200 when you take all of the reviews that have gone on at every level and we have got to get on with implementing them. 'I have never said we should not look again at any issue. I have wanted to be assured that on the question of any inquiry. That's why I asked Louise Casey who I hugely respect to do an audit.' But Tory leader Kemi Badenoch, who has repeatedly demanded the PM launch a full inquiry, said: 'Keir Starmer doesn't know what he thinks unless an official report has told him so. Just like he dismissed concerns about the winter fuel payment and then had to u-turn, just like he needed the Supreme Court to tell him what a woman is, he had to be led by the nose to make this correct decision here. 'I've been repeatedly calling for a full national inquiry since January. It's about time he recognised he made a mistake and apologise for six wasted months.' She went on: 'But this must not be the end of the matter. There are many, many more questions that need answering to ensure this inquiry is done properly and quickly. Many survivors of the grooming gangs will be relieved that this is finally happening, but they need a resolution soon not in 10 years' time. Justice delayed is justice denied.' Since 2010 there have been a string of trials of grooming gang members for sexually exploiting young girls while landmark official inquiries into Rotherham, Telford and Rochdale have revealed the huge numbers of those abused. However demands for a new national inquiry began growing at the start of this year, fuelled by tech tycoon Elon Musk's attacks on the Government. Initially ministers said they wanted to focus on implementing recommendations from the wider Jay report into child sexual exploitation but under mounting pressure Home Secretary Yvette Cooper announced a series of new local probes in January as well as the audit by Lady Casey. The calls kept coming for a full national inquiry with former Reform MP Rupert Lowe vowing to set up his own investigation. Opposition leader Mrs Badenoch has raised the issue at Prime Minister's Questions, even suggesting the PM was 'dragging his heels' because he did not want 'Labour cover-ups exposed'. In January he told the Commons: 'There have been a number of inquiries, both national and local, including one covering Oldham. Reasonable people can agree or disagree on whether a further inquiry is necessary. 'This morning, I met some of the victims and survivors of this scandal. They were clear with me that they want action now, not the delay of a further inquiry. The Jay inquiry, the last national inquiry, was seven years. A further inquiry would take us to 2031. Action is what is required.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store