Lord Nazir Ahmed was found guilty last month by the Sheffield crown court from sexual violations against two children.
Peler Peer Peer Peer Lord Nazir Ahmed has been imprisoned for five and a half years for sexual harassment of two children in the 1970s, UK media reported on Friday.
Ahmed has conducted an anti-Indian campaign. He was found guilty last month by the Sheffield crown court from sexual violations against two children. He was found guilty of two charges of attempted rape and one of the buggery.
Justice Lavender passed the sentence on Friday. In March 2019, Lord Ahmed was charged with a historical sexual violation of two children, two accusations of rape experiments, and one unsenectile attack in the early 1970s.
The accusation against Ahmed was related to two complainants – a boy and female – and to accuse the incident between 1971 and 1974. The cost of an indecent assault was related to boys under 14 years.
He has become a sustainable supporter of Khalistan terror groups and criticism of Indian government policies.
Even though he projected himself as a crusade because Kashmir, in fact, he used his position to exploit Kashmir women sexually.
Nazir Ahmed was born in Kashmir who was occupied by Pakistan but his political roots were in Rotherham, where he grew up and still alive.
He moved to England in 1969 with his family to join his father who worked in steel mills in Rotherham.
After studying at Sheffield Hallam University, he runs a shop chain in his home city and becomes a property developer.
In 1998, he became one of the first Muslim colleagues appointed to the House of Lords at the time – Prime Minister Tony Blair. He resigned from the Labor Party in 2013.
Lord Nazir Ahmed, who called himself “campaign for Kashmir” faced many allegations of sexual violations and resigned from House of Lords in 2020. The home committee recommended that he should be expelled.
A group of Kashmir women in London has launched the #Metoo Hollywood protest campaign against politicians including Ahmed Nazir and healers of faith that exploit vulnerable women in the Kashmir community, the committee report states.