A Somalian asylum seeker who was jailed for several sex attacks but was allowed to stay in Britain has been jailed indeterminately for a further attack.
Sadiq Mohammed, 32, was found guilty of abducting and sexually assaulting a girl of seven in Bristol in May 2006.
Mohammed, of Barton Hill, was jailed for four years in 2000 for indecently assaulting a 55-year-old woman and trying to attack two others.
He assaulted the girl four years after being released from jail.
He took the girl from outside a corner shop and sexually assaulted her in his flat.
'Justice served'
He denied one charge of child abduction and assault, but the jury at Bristol Crown Court took just under an hour to find him guilty on both counts.
Speaking after the hearing the victim's father, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said he was relieved.
He said: "Justice has been served today. We are very glad about the verdict." Commenting on why Mohammed had not been deported after his earlier crimes, a Home Office spokesman said: "Each case is considered on its individual merits in accordance to our international obligations and taking full account of conditions in the country concerned as they impact on the individual. "We will only enforce return where we are satisfied that the individual concerned will not be at risk."
So there you have it, just a taste of the joys of living in Britain today under a gutless government. Immigrants are still pouring in and the nation hasn't been able to absorb the huge numbers we already have. Nor are we likely to, at this rate.
Sadiq Mohammed, 32, was found guilty of abducting and sexually assaulting a girl of seven in Bristol in May 2006.
Mohammed, of Barton Hill, was jailed for four years in 2000 for indecently assaulting a 55-year-old woman and trying to attack two others.
He assaulted the girl four years after being released from jail.
He took the girl from outside a corner shop and sexually assaulted her in his flat.
'Justice served'
He denied one charge of child abduction and assault, but the jury at Bristol Crown Court took just under an hour to find him guilty on both counts.
Speaking after the hearing the victim's father, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said he was relieved.
He said: "Justice has been served today. We are very glad about the verdict." Commenting on why Mohammed had not been deported after his earlier crimes, a Home Office spokesman said: "Each case is considered on its individual merits in accordance to our international obligations and taking full account of conditions in the country concerned as they impact on the individual. "We will only enforce return where we are satisfied that the individual concerned will not be at risk."
So there you have it, just a taste of the joys of living in Britain today under a gutless government. Immigrants are still pouring in and the nation hasn't been able to absorb the huge numbers we already have. Nor are we likely to, at this rate.
Comment