Birmingham Post

Illegal immigrants at Home Secretary’s favourite restaurant Javid’s curry house of choice stripped of its alcohol licence by council following raid

- Carl Jackson Local Democracy Reporter

ONE of Home Secretary Sajid Javid’s favourite Indian restaurant­s – which named a curry named after him – employed illegal immigrants, it has been revealed.

Jilabi, in Sheldon, this week had its alcohol licence stripped permanentl­y by Birmingham City Council in a landmark immigratio­n case for the authority.

A licensing sub-committee heard that police, alongside Home Office and immigratio­n officials, swooped on the premises on Coventry Road around 8pm on November 23 following a tipoff.

Five men tried to run out of the back door where awaiting police officers ushered them back inside the restaurant. Three men, all from Bangladesh, were ultimately arrested, one of them having been an illegal immigrant since 2010.

Inspectors were later told how up to ten further men had removed their staff clothing and blended in with customers to avoid detection, although investigat­ors could not confirm the allegation­s.

Police also found that CCTV was not installed, in breach of the restaurant’s licence, and that staff training was not up to standard.

All three immigrants have since been returned, or are due to be returned, to their home country.

PC Abdool Rohomon, West Midlands Police licensing officer, said: “This is not about how well they are run, how good the curry is and how popular they are. It is a very popular place, there are pictures of the Home Secretary having been there, I’m sure he’d love that now.”

He added: “You instil upon them trust and they have to comply. The trust has totally been eroded by their actions.”

The council took an interim step to suspend the licence on December 7 prior to a review last week.

Around a dozen customers had written to the authority in support of the restaurant, calling for the sanction to be lifted.

One claimed that Home Secretary Sajid Javid was a regular. The MP for Bromsgrove was photograph­ed at Jilabi in August and the venue even renamed its Railway Lamb Curry Sajid’s Railway Lamb in honour of the visit.

Other high-profile customers have also frequented the venue in recent months. A Facebook post in October pictured Midsomer Murders actor Jason Hughes saying he had joined the ‘Jilabi Club of fame’, while another stated that Watford FC captain, and Birmingham City fan, Troy Deeney was a weekly regular.

Jilabi opened in 2002 and expanded into the former Chinese restaurant next door in 2014. The fact that they had two licences, one for Jilabi and another for Delicious Buffet, was another thorny issue with police, who argued that they had been effectivel­y operating as one business.

Abdul Rouf, one of the joint licence holders at the premises, claimed two of the immigrants had started a trial period the day before the police raid and that he had delegated responsibi­lity for checking their paperwork because he had taken a day off at short notice.

He admitted that the third man had been there around two weeks, and they had only seen his driving licence. Mr Rouf pointed out that since the inspection he had hired an administra­tor to help with checks and paperwork, installed CCTV and updated staff training.

“I apologise profusely,” he told the committee. “I am sorry for having to bring everybody here. I’m responsibl­e for everything that went on and, going forward, I have taken on board our mistakes.

“They happened inadverten­tly and I want to reassure that nothing of this nature or any other mishap will occur under my watch.”

Mr Rouf confirmed he would have to lay off a number of staff due to the licence revocation – the strongest sanction available to the council.

 ??  ?? >Home Secretary Sajid Javid, left, pictured at the Jilabi Indian restaurant
>Home Secretary Sajid Javid, left, pictured at the Jilabi Indian restaurant
 ??  ?? > Jilabi, in Coventry Road, Sheldon, has lost its alcohol licence
> Jilabi, in Coventry Road, Sheldon, has lost its alcohol licence

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