Nigel Faraj has called upon the police to give up the immigration situation of the suspects accused of crimes after the arrest of two people in connection with the alleged rape of a 12 -year -old girl in Warvikshire.
The reform UK party leader said that he thinks “exactly” that such details should be released when asked about the case at a news conference on Monday.
It has been reported that two people accused in connection with alleged rape in Nunton last month are Afghan citizens, but the police have not confirmed this.
The Warvikshire police said that once someone is accused of crime, the force follows national guidance that does not include sharing ethnicity or immigration status.
Authorized professional practice says the same after forces across the country, and quoted by the college of policing.
Asked by a reporter at the news conference in Westminster, whether the police should issue the names, addresses and immigration status of the suspects after being accused of crime, Faraj said: “What was the unrest on our streets after the Southport last year, we were not told the status of the attacker.
“This spread the principles of crazy conspiracy online.”
last years Deadly attack in SouthportIn which three young girls were murdered, the cause of spreading a false claim online online that the attacker was a Muslim asylum.
Faraj continued to add an alleged lack of information from the police about what happened in Southport last July: “What may have happened to the people of speculation that I make things that I think I think they think more than otherwise”.
To further clarify his thoughts, did they think that police forces should be obliged to publish such details, he said: “Yes, I think they need them.”
Later at the news conference, Faraj asked the police verdict not to release details about the alleged Nunton attackers, “Cover-ups reminiscent of what happened after the Southport killings last year.”
He said, “This is not … somehow the contempt of the court for the British public to know the identity of those who have allegedly committed serious crimes,” he said.
“I felt that in view of Southport attacks, and I think today more strongly today.”
Ahmed Mulkhil has been accused of two rape cases, while Mohammad Kabir has been accused of kidnapping, strangling and raping a girl under the age of 13.
The 23 -year -old Mr. Mulakhil appeared before the magistrate on July 28 at Coventry, while Mr. Kabir, also appeared in court on 23, Saturday.
Both were sent to custody.
Warvikshire County Council leader George Finch told the same news conference on Monday morning that he was “begging” for the information issued after the allegations.
Finch, who became the youngest council leader in the UK at the age of 19 and represents the UK, said that he contacted the Chief Executive Officer of the Council, Monica Fograt, he said that he wanted to talk to the Warwickshire police “to urge” to release the immigration status about the first man.
“I was begging for this, screaming, screaming, calling [for the information] To release ”, he said.
Following the charge of the second suspect, Finch stated that he wrote a letter to Home Secretary Yett Cooper and Warvikshire Police Chief Constable Alex Franklin-Smit to call for immediate release of two suspects.
Finch published a letter on his social media account on Sunday, in which he said that Ms. Phogartha told him that Mr. Kabir was a refugee who lived in a House of Multiple Occupity (HMO).
Speaking on Monday, Finch said that he is working to “fight” the houses of several occupants that have “put in the house for illegal immigrants”.
He also claimed that the reform UK needs to “change things” and “the last line of defense against the drop, the council’s cover-ups”.
Asked if the police should release the ethnicity of the accused of crimes, the Prime Minister’s official spokesperson said the police and the courts were operationally independent, but the principle was to be “as much as possible”.
“We have always said and continue to say that transparency is important,” he said.
“This is our situation. For the police for the Central Government, we should always be as transparent as possible when they come into matters.”
He said: “This is clearly a deep disturbing and disturbing case, about which the public is right to feel surprised and angry.
“With regard to this case, individuals have been charged and we are now in a live investigation.”
In a statement, Warvikshire Police and Crime Commissioner Philip Servabe said: “It is necessary to state that policing decisions – such as issuing details about a suspect – should follow national guidance and legal requirements.”
He said that he would not get speculation about the personal circumstances of the people involved while the court proceedings were active.
The BBC has approached the Warvikshire County Council for comments.