Sunday, June 28, 2009

Criminal Somali Asylum Swindler Released to Prey on Brits Once Again

criminal Somali bogus ‘asylum seeker’ who has robbed and parasited off the British public for over ten years has been ordered released from prison because of the Human Rights Act.




Ahmed Daq must be given bail because the Home Office has taken too long to deport him and his continued detention is now unlawful, a High Court judge has ruled.

Daq has a history of violent offences but in spite of this he is to be released because the Home Office is still caught up in debates over whether it is ’safe’ for him to be sent back to Somalia.

The decision was made even though Deputy High Court judge John Howell QC accepted clearly a risk of Daq, who had “embarked on a criminal career”, committing further offences or absconding.

Daq first arrived in the UK in 1997 and claimed asylum as a Somali national who feared for his life in his home country.

Addicted to alcohol and drugs, Daq committed 18 offences between 1998 and 2004, using 13 aliases. They included robbery, theft, two assaults occasioning actual bodily harm, possession of an offensive weapon - an axe - in a public place without reasonable excuse, using threatening words and behaviour, and seven burglaries.

He was last due to be released in June 2006 but was immediately served with a further notice of intention to deport to Somalia and detained pending removal. He has been in custody ever since.

The judge said because there is no imminent prospect of deportation, the Home Office could no longer legitimately hold him. He said: “Removal is not going to be possible within a reasonable time. Therefore his detention has become unlawful.”

The reason for the delay is because Daq has launched an appeal against his deportation in the Court of Appeals. His hearing has been delayed as the legal debate continues over whether it is safe to return criminals and failed ‘asylum seekers’ to the wretched Third World east African state.

He is currently being held in Bedford Prison following alleged incidents of aggressive and abusive behaviour, including attacks on other inmates, in immigration detention centres.

Speaking after the hearing, Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch, said: “The public are losing patience with these increasingly absurd decisions on so-called asylum seekers.

“This man has no right to be in Britain but has been playing the system for ten years with taxpayer funded legal aid.

“It is quite unacceptable that he should now be released when, as the judge recognised, there is a clear risk that he will commit yet more offences. If the law requires this then Parliament should do something useful and change it.”

Source: BNP News

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