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Third released asylum seeker arrested after ‘contacting a minor’: pedophile ran a child prostitution ring and traded cigarettes for sex with a 13-year-old girl – as pressure mounts on Albo to fire ministers who released them

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A third asylum seeker released by the High Court has been arrested; this time a registered sex offender who is the leader of a gang that exploits children.

Emran Dad, 33, was arrested in Dandenong, southeast of Melbourne, for allegedly making contact with minors.

He has previously been convicted of having sex with an underage girl in exchange for cigarettes.

It comes after it emerged on Monday evening that two released prisoners had been arrested by Australian authorities.

Mohammed Ali Nadari was arrested in western Sydney last weekend, just six days after being released following a controversial High Court ruling.

He has a criminal history, including serious crimes involving violence, sex and firearms.

Afghan refugee Aliyawar Yawari, 65, was arrested at the Pavlos Motel in Pooraka in Adelaide’s north on Saturday and charged with indecently assaulting a female guest.

Pressure continues to mount on Anthony Albanese to sack Home Secretary Clare O’Neil (pictured) and Immigration Minister Andrew Giles over the detention debacle

Ministers are facing calls from the coalition to resign after three of the released prisoners were charged with serious crimes within weeks of their release (pictured, Andrew Giles)

Ministers are facing calls from the coalition to resign after three of the released prisoners were charged with serious crimes within weeks of their release (pictured, Andrew Giles)

Afghan refugee Aliyawar Yawari was deemed a 'danger to the Australian community' by a South Australian judge in 2016 after attacks on three elderly women in 2013 and 2014

Afghan refugee Aliyawar Yawari was deemed a ‘danger to the Australian community’ by a South Australian judge in 2016 after attacks on three elderly women in 2013 and 2014

The manager of Pavlos Motel – who gave the name Happy Mann when contacted by Daily Mail Australia – said Yawari seemed like an ideal guest until police showed up and informed him of the alleged assault.

“He was really good,” Mr. Mann said.

“He just talked to me a few times, but it all went well, I wasn’t suspicious about anything.”

Mr Mann said Yawari had been staying at the motel for a “couple of weeks” and denied any knowledge of the alleged attack.

‘No one knows what happened, only the police know. They told us yesterday he had been charged,” Mr Mann said.

Guri Bhullar, who works at the motel’s front desk, later confirmed that Yawari had checked in on November 14 and described him as “no problems, always calm – a good guest.”

“He didn’t like to talk a lot, he didn’t come to the reception very often, so we didn’t talk much,” Mr Bhullar said.

‘He was a quiet person, not a difficult person: he always stayed in his own room.

Yawari is in court.

Victoria Police told Daily Mail Australia: ‘Police today arrested a man after he breached his reporting obligations as a registered sex offender.

‘The 33-year-old was arrested in Dandenong this morning without incident.

‘He is currently being questioned by police and further updates will be provided as the case progresses.

Victoria Police can confirm the man is among those recently released following a Supreme Court ruling. Victoria Police is always proactive in addressing community risks posed by those who would commit criminal acts.”

Opposition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan said on Tuesday it was time for Mr Albanese to do the

Opposition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan said on Tuesday it was time for Mr Albanese to do the “right thing” and ask Ms O’Neil and Mr Giles to resign.

Pressure is mounting on Anthony Albanese to sack Home Secretary Clare O’Neil and Immigration Minister Andrew Giles over the detention debacle.

Ministers are facing calls from the coalition to resign after one of the released prisoners was charged with serious sexual assault within weeks of his release, and a second was arrested for drugs offences.

Opposition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan said on Tuesday: “The time has come for the Prime Minister to do the right thing and ask for these ministers to resign, and if they don’t, he should sack them.”

The pressure to turn heads has only increased since it emerged that the mass release could have been avoided if the Labor government had released just one detainee: the Rohingya pedophile known as NZYQ, who has been in custody since serving a prison sentence served for child abuse. abuse and on whose case the Supreme Court challenge was based.

But Disability Services Minister Bill Shorten said there was no point in calling for politicians to be sacked, when the judges who made the ruling were immune from such actions due to the separation of powers.

“The logic of that is that the Supreme Court should step down,” he said.

“If you really think there was a way to prevent this, the reality is the Supreme Court has made its decision. That is their right and privilege in our legal system.”

Mr Shorten argued that both ministers had moved with ‘the utmost speed’ to enact laws that would see released detainees returned to preventive detention if they were assessed as posing a risk to public safety.

‘The Supreme Court has made a decision, we have had to respond very quickly and there is a bill in the Senate today that regulates that [the Coalition] what we can vote for to protect people,” he said.

Tehan accused the government of failing to adequately prepare for the possible Supreme Court ruling that indefinite immigration detention would be unlawful.

“We would have made sure in the months leading up to the Supreme Court ruling that we looked at what legislation we could put in place to keep the community safe,” he said.

‘It was warned that there was a real fear that these people would reoffend and unfortunately it appears that this has happened.’

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