Set for release to groomed the victim in fear as an attacker

BBC News, West Midlands

A woman abused by a Telford Grooming Gang says she is “living in fear” as preparations are made to release one of her attackers from jail.
Despite the Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmud, Mohammad Ali Sultan is to be released, asking the parole board to reconsider the decision.
The woman using the name of Kate Alysis said that she feels insecure and was not given the opportunity to provide the victim’s impact statement for the Sultan’s parole hearing, who raped her.
A spokesman for the Ministry of Justice said that the department was disappointed, but honored the decision of the independent parole board.
Ms. Elisia, who has forgiven her right to oblivion, said: “I think they have been very careful to keep her safe. I don’t think they have done everything they could do to keep me safe.”
Talking to Naga Munchetty BBC Radio 5 LiveHe said that the Sultan would be subject to public safety meetings but will not be given details.
‘I am not just his victim’
“We don’t know if he is going to visit our house,” he said.
“We don’t know what his motivations are, so we do not know.
“I don’t know what his mentality is. The only mindset I know he has raped me.”
Since the Sultan was put in jail, Ms. Elisia moved away from the Shropshire, studied at the university and was a qualified mental health nurse for 13 years.
Ms. Elisia said that the decision to release her was made on 13 December.
However, she was only Informed on 6 JanuaryWhich was late in this process as the authorities knew in the last June that a parole hearing was booked, he said.
“I must have been six months old that it was moving with the fact that it was moving,” he said.
“I found it quite shocking. I was not expecting it because it seems like a very short time that he is in jail, seeing that I am not his only victim.”

Was the sultan Seven years jailed in 2012After accepting sex with two teenage girls.
He was punished Extended in 2015 And 2019 He was then convicted of more sexual offenses.
Ms. Elisia said that her aggrieved contact officer had “apologized”.
But she said that she was unable to make a statement for parole hearing, saying: “No one had investigated with my victim’s contact officer if I wanted to make a statement or investigated that all the statements were there,” she said.
The Ministry of Justice said that the Sultan would be subject to “intensive probation supervision”.
A spokesman said, “(he) faces an immediate return to jail if he fails to follow his strict license conditions,” a spokesman said.