The child sex offender whose identity remains undisclosed was scheduled to be deported to his home country in Eritrea after completing his prison term under a 2014 order. However, he appealed against the deportation, arguing that he would be deprived of access to treatment for his depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) if he were deported to Eritrea. His lawyers also argued that he would likely face punishment in his home country for evading compulsory military service and there were fears he might resort to suicide.
But a government security report found that the Eritrean would pose a "medium" risk to public safety is he is allowed to live freely in the United Kingdom. Despite this, the British government bought the migrant's alibi and granted him reprieve. (Related: Sexual predators avoid jail time by identifying as “transgender.”)
But Nigel Mills, Member of Parliament (MP) for Amber Valley in Derbyshire, could not help but express disbelief during an interview with the Sun.
"This man committed a serious criminal offense and should be nowhere near this country," the MP remarked. "If he was concerned about losing mental health treatment or being arrested for fleeing the draft, he should have thought about that before he committed the crime."
Mills further argued that the Eritrean's case is not isolated, but part of a larger problem within the British justice system. "This decision is another sign the tribunal system is deeply out of touch with the rest of [the U.K.]," he continued.
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Several cases support the MP's claims, with the most recent occurring days before the Eritrean's deportation was blocked.
Earlier, illegal migrant Anicet Mayela pleaded guilty of raping a 15-year-old girl before the Oxford Crown Court. The bench heard the 40-year-old's confession, claiming it was exceptionally dangerous and could lead to a life sentence.
Mayela, who hails from the Republic of the Congo, first arrived in the U.K. in 2004 after paying an "agent" to smuggle him out of Africa. An earlier attempt to deport him failed after a cabin crew sympathetic to his cause blocked his flight.
The Congolese national became well-known among anti-deportation campaigners due to his protests outside a detention center wearing a sign proclaiming, "Migrants are not criminals." Mayela is also one of the many criminal migrants who have been invoking their human rights to fight back against deportation to their home countries.
In 2023, a judge ruled that an illegal migrant from Gambia who attacked a woman in Scotland could not be deported because he might not be given proper medical treatment in West Africa.
Similarly, an Afghan illegal migrant convicted of sexual offenses secured refugee status in the U.K. by arguing that public indecency, his crime, would be severely punished in Afghanistan.
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Watch this report by InfoWars founder Alex Jones about the arrest of a former CNN producer in 2021 for crimes against children.
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