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Birmingham councillor in court over election win

Washwood Heath member Ansar Ali Khan to face allegations he won his seat by illegally using leaders at a city mosque to influence voters

Coun Ansar Ali Khan

A Birmingham Labour councillor will this week face allegations in court that he won his election illegally using mosque leaders to sway voters.

The first election court hearing in Birmingham since 2007 opens today with a legal challenge to the election of Washwood Heath councillor Ansar Ali Khan.

Coun Khan, who is also chairman of the council's Hodge Hill district committee, won the seat in May with a thumping majority of 7,805 - the largest in Birmingham - and 78 per cent of vote.

But his Liberal Democrat opponent Shamsur Rehman wants the result declared void amid claims that Coun Khan used the backing of mosque leaders and Pakistani politicians to sway voters.

Coun Khan and the Labour Party vehemently deny the allegations which they earlier described as "unsubstantiated" and will contest the hearing.

Presiding over the hearing at the Priory Courts is Judge Timothy Straker QC, who in 2007 dismissed an election case against Labour councillor for Aston Muhammad Afzal.

The case is expected to last for three days.

The challenge follows the success of a case against the controversial former Mayor of Tower Hamlets Lutfur Rahman, which used archaic election laws to argue he had been elected as a result of undue spiritual influence.