The Scottish Mail on Sunday

PLANE MUTINY KEEPS RAPIST IN UK

- By Martin Beckford HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

A SOMALIAN whose deportatio­n from Britain was dramatical­ly halted after airline passengers staged a mutiny demanding his release can be exposed today as a convicted gang rapist who was being kicked out of the country because of his sickening crime.

Officials escorting Yaqub Ahmed on a flight from Heathrow to Turkey were forced to abandon his deportatio­n when around a dozen holidaymak­ers who felt sorry for him angrily intervened shortly before take-off. At one stage during the astonishin­g episode, filmed on mobile phones, one traveller complained: ‘They’re separating him from his family’, while others chanted ‘take him off the plane’.

When harassed security guards

caved in and walked 29-year-old Ahmed off the Turkish Airlines flight, he was seen thanking those on board for their support as they cheered and applauded. One person was heard declaring: ‘You’re free, man!’

But the passengers who thought they were doing a good deed were unaware that the man they were defending had been sentenced to nine years in jail for his part in the vicious gang rape of a teenage girl – and that another member of his gang later fought for Islamic State in Syria.

Today The Mail on Sunday can reveal how Ahmed and three other youths preyed on a 16-year-old stranger after she became separated from her friends during a night out in London’s Leicester Square, in August 2007.

In a planned attack, they lured her back to a flat in Crouch End, North London, by pretending her friends were waiting for her there – then gang-raped her.

The gang, aged between 18 and 20, were caught when neighbours heard the girl’s cries for help and rang police.

All four men denied rape, despite DNA evidence. They were found guilty at Wood Green Crown Court and each jailed for nine years. Police detective Emma Bird said at the time: ‘The sentences given out by the judge reflect the seriousnes­s of this offence.’

Ahmed, 18 at the time of the rape and living in Clerkenwel­l, North London, is thought to have been granted refugee status after arriving in Britain from wartorn Somalia as a boy.

He was released from prison after serving little more than four years, and lived in a halfway house in North London until recently. Because he had been jailed for such a serious crime, the Home Office ordered his deportatio­n, which led to him being placed on the flight to Istanbul last Tuesday afternoon.

He received a temporary reprieve because of the impromptu interventi­on of passengers. But when video of the protest was published by MailOnline, hundreds of readers expressed their outrage.

One wrote: ‘The police should have been called and all the passengers who were interferin­g should have been arrested and removed from the plane.’

Another user said: ‘Looked like a plane full of snowflakes.’ And a third pointed out: ‘Now it will cost a lot more to fly the man back on a private charter! Well done silly interferin­g, self-seeking, do-gooding idiots!’

Ahmed is now believed to be in an immigratio­n detention centre while officials try to place him on another flight out of the UK, but this process could take months particular­ly if his lawyers use his temporary reprieve as an opportunit­y to appeal against his deportatio­n.

Last night, Tory backbenche­r Philip Hollobone, who has tabled bills to speed up the deportatio­n of foreign criminals, said: ‘We need to deport these people and members of the public should not be allowed to obstruct the proper course of justice.

‘Officials accompanyi­ng the deportee need to react appropriat­ely to passengers who do not know what is going on. To simply walk off in the face of passenger confusion is not good enough.’

Harry Fletcher of the Victims’ Rights Campaign said: ‘This deportatio­n was clearly in the public interest. Sitting deportees in the general passenger area of a plane is wrong and leads to this kind of ill-informed protest.’

It is not the first time that planned deportatio­ns have been disrupted on planes.

In July, a Swedish student filmed herself halting the deportatio­n of an Afghan asylum seeker on a Turkish Airlines flight from Gothenburg to Istanbul.

Elin Ersson said in the video that was streamed live on Facebook: ‘A person is going to get deported to Afghanista­n where there is war and he’s going to get killed.’

Then, in August, a Turkish Airlines pilot refused to take off from Heathrow after campaigner­s convinced him that the asylum seeker on his jet would face beheading by the Taliban if he was returned to Afghanista­n.

Virgin Airlines has stopped assisting the deportatio­n of illegal immigrants after pressure from activists.

The Home Office previously spent millions of pounds a year chartering planes to fly failed asylum seekers and foreign national offenders to their home countries, most commonly Albania, Pakistan and Nigeria. But because of the cost of the flights, it now increasing­ly books seats on commercial services.

Latest figures show the Home Office spent £17 million on scheduled flights and £8.6 million on charter flights to deport people in 2016-17.

A Home Office spokesman said: ‘All foreign nationals who are given a custodial sentence will be considered for removal. Those who abuse our hospitalit­y by committing crimes in the UK should be in no doubt of our determinat­ion to deport them and we have removed more than 43,000 foreign offenders since 2010.’

One of Ahmed’s co-defendants,

‘The public should not be allowed to obstruct the proper course of justice’

Adnan Mohamud, was granted refugee status in Britain in 2002 having been born in Somalia, and is still thought to be in the UK. The youngest member of the gang, Ondogo Ahmed, travelled to Syria to fight for Islamic State just months after he was freed from jail. He is thought to have been killed a few weeks later. Additional reporting by Abul Taher, Jonathan Bucks and Mark Wood

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