Child sex grooming gang quartet face deportation to Pakistan after losing legal challenge to strip their British Citizenship.

Shabir Ahmed, Adil Khan, Qari Abdul Rauf and Abdul Aziz lost their appeal against being stripped of their British citizenship.
Four members of a child sex grooming gang are facing deportation after losing a legal challenge in their battle to remain in the UK.
The men had appealed against moves by the Government to strip them of their British citizenship.
But their claims were dismissed on all grounds by the Upper Tribunal of the Immigration and Asylum Chamber.
The ruling paves the way for the men, all of Pakistani nationality who acquired British citizenship by naturalisation, to be removed from the UK.
The case centres on decisions by then home secretary Theresa May proposing to deprive the men of their British citizenship on the grounds that it would be "conducive to the public good".
Handing down the judgment, Mr Justice McCloskey, president of the Upper Tribunal, said the cases were "of some notoriety", and described the men's crimes as "shocking, brutal and repulsive".
Rochdale MP Simon Danczuk called for the men to be deported to Pakistan "as soon as possible".

Shabir Ahmed, Adil Khan, Qari Abdul Rauf and Abdul Aziz lost their appeal against being stripped of their British citizenship.
Four members of a child sex grooming gang are facing deportation after losing a legal challenge in their battle to remain in the UK.
The men had appealed against moves by the Government to strip them of their British citizenship.
But their claims were dismissed on all grounds by the Upper Tribunal of the Immigration and Asylum Chamber.
The ruling paves the way for the men, all of Pakistani nationality who acquired British citizenship by naturalisation, to be removed from the UK.
The case centres on decisions by then home secretary Theresa May proposing to deprive the men of their British citizenship on the grounds that it would be "conducive to the public good".
Handing down the judgment, Mr Justice McCloskey, president of the Upper Tribunal, said the cases were "of some notoriety", and described the men's crimes as "shocking, brutal and repulsive".
Rochdale MP Simon Danczuk called for the men to be deported to Pakistan "as soon as possible".

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