excalibur
Diamond Member
- Mar 19, 2015
- 28,603
- 57,885
- 2,290
The suicide of the West.
Next, we don't have toilets where you will send me so I cannot go without a toilet.
e-mail
338
shares
3.9k
View comments
A migrant who fought deportation by arguing his son disliked foreign chicken nuggets has won the right to stay in Britain.
The case of convict Klevis Disha, 39 – who entered Britain illegally under a false name and lied in a failed asylum claim – sparked outrage when it emerged a year ago.
Critics cited it as a stark example of abuse of the European Convention on Human Rights. The Home Office talked tough, pressing to have him expelled – which should have been a formality as he was jailed for two years in 2017.
But despite the outcry he has won his appeal against removal.
His barrister Richard McKee successfully argued it would be 'unduly harsh' for his son, 11, to have to join his father in Albania, or be left in Britain without him.
Disha was 15 in 2001 when he 'entered the UK illegally as an unaccompanied minor', judges were told.
Two days later he made an asylum claim on the basis of political persecution. He stated, falsely, that he had been born in the former Yugoslavia in 1986. It also appears he gave a false name.
Disha's asylum claim was refused nine months later with 'the Home Secretary not being satisfied he had a well-founded fear of persecution'.
...
www.dailymail.co.uk
Next, we don't have toilets where you will send me so I cannot go without a toilet.
338
shares
3.9k
View comments
A migrant who fought deportation by arguing his son disliked foreign chicken nuggets has won the right to stay in Britain.
The case of convict Klevis Disha, 39 – who entered Britain illegally under a false name and lied in a failed asylum claim – sparked outrage when it emerged a year ago.
Critics cited it as a stark example of abuse of the European Convention on Human Rights. The Home Office talked tough, pressing to have him expelled – which should have been a formality as he was jailed for two years in 2017.
But despite the outcry he has won his appeal against removal.
His barrister Richard McKee successfully argued it would be 'unduly harsh' for his son, 11, to have to join his father in Albania, or be left in Britain without him.
Disha was 15 in 2001 when he 'entered the UK illegally as an unaccompanied minor', judges were told.
Two days later he made an asylum claim on the basis of political persecution. He stated, falsely, that he had been born in the former Yugoslavia in 1986. It also appears he gave a false name.
Disha's asylum claim was refused nine months later with 'the Home Secretary not being satisfied he had a well-founded fear of persecution'.
...
Criminal allowed to stay in UK by arguing son disliked foreign nuggets
The case of convict Klevis Disha, 39 - who entered Britain illegally under a false name, and lied in a failed asylum claim - sparked outrage when it emerged a year ago.