Cheshire East leader urges out-of-town Webb House protesters to 'go home'
By Belinda Ryan - Local Democracy Reporter & Ryan Parker - Crewe & Nantwich Nub News Chief Reporter 5th Jun 2026
Cheshire East's leader has urged out-of-town protesters outside Webb House in Crewe to go home, saying they are not helping anyone but are making residents feel very vulnerable.
The protests outside the HQ of the Ahmadi Religion of Peace and Light, Victoria Avenue, have continued since the building was raided by more than 500 police officers on 29 April, following allegations of serious sexual offences, forced marriage, and modern slavery, reported to have taken place in 2023.
Council leader Nick Mannion (Macclesfield, Labour), said Cheshire East is continuing to support affected residents and he understands the concerns, frustrations and anxiety of people living near Webb House.
At Thursday's (4 June) cabinet meeting he had a direct message for those people who are continuing to protest outside Webb House.
"Many of you are from outside the local community, and I will say, please go home and stop," said the council leader.

"Your actions are not helping anyone, certainly not the people living locally, including families with young children and older people, and I've been contacted by many, and they feel especially vulnerable about the late-night noise and associated anti-social behaviour.
"They've been disturbed and inconvenienced by your actions for too long. They want you to stop, go home and please allow the community some space."
Cllr Mannion said he understood people have questions about Webb House and want more information.
"But it's an ongoing police operation and the information that can be shared at the moment is extremely limited, you know this, and I will continue to update the communities as and when I am able to," he said.
He added Cheshire East had set up a dedicated page on its website about Webb House and this would be updated with information the council can share.
Twelve people were arrested following the police raids, which took place on Badger Avenue, Nantwich Road, alongsideWebb House, and have all been released on conditional bail.
They are not allowed to enter Crewe.
Six of those arrested are subject to additional restrictions after police applied for slavery and trafficking risk orders.
Cheshire Police have stressed this is not an investigation into the religion, but into the serious allegations which have been reported.
Seven protesters have also been arrested since April. Two have been charged and are due to appear in court on 23 June.
READ MORE:Hough housing plans delayed while Natural Gas consulted on pipeline.
Free from clickbait, pop-up ads and unwanted surveys, Crewe Nub News is a quality online newspaper for our town.
Subscribe to our FREE weekly newsletter email HERE - just click the 'SIGN UP' button.
Please consider following Crewe Nub News on Facebook or Twitter.
CHECK OUT OUR Jobs Section HERE!
crewe vacancies updated hourly!
Click here to see more: crewe jobs
Share: