A DOMESTIC tyrant must serve six months longer behind bars after trying to kick the daughters he is locked up for sexually abusing out of the family home so he could move back there on his release from jail.

The 46-year-old man breached court orders by telling his wife on a prison visit to pass on the message that he wanted the two young women out of the house and out of Bradford.

“I don’t want to see them and them to show their faces,” he said.

The man, who can’t be named to protect the identities of his children, was imprisoned for six years in May last year for sexually abusing his daughters when they were children, child cruelty to other family members and assaulting his wife. He was banned from contacting the young women by an indefinite Sexual Harm Prevention Order and he was already subject to a Forced Marriage Protection Order imposed by the city’s Family Court.

When his wife visited him in prison in December, she came home “happy and thrilled,” his daughters noticed. She had a message from their father telling them to leave the city before he got out of jail.

The man, who was convicted by Bradford and Keighley magistrates of breaching both orders, described the law as “rubbish.”

He said in his police interview: “I just told my wife to tell your daughters they should not live at their address. How can they live in a house where I want to live with my wife?”

He said of one of them: “She got me in a bad situation and she got me in jail.”

The man, who represented himself at Bradford Crown Court yesterday, with the help of an interpreter, said that when he sent the message “my mind wasn’t working properly.”

“It wasn’t a bad intention. My intentions were very good. When I am coming back, I do not want to live with them so for their sake, they should not be there.”

Adding six months consecutively to his sentence, Judge Jonathan Rose said the man’s daughters were entitled to feel safe when he was behind bars.

“They suffered significantly from the offences you committed against them and they were terrified of you and the harm that you were capable of doing to them, and just because you were sent to prison did not mean that they were no longer afraid of you,” he said.

The man had “won his wife round”, sending the message through her because he was confident she would not report him to the police.

Judge Rose warned the man he would be jailed for up to five years if he breached the orders again. He said: “You have no remorse whatsoever.”