By Giuseppe De Santis
A recently reported story is so absurd that many may assume it is fictional, but unfortunately, it is tragically true. An Albanian criminal can remain in Britain partly because his son dislikes foreign chicken nuggets!
A court decided that it would be ‘unduly harsh’ for the 10-year-old boy to be mandated to move back with his father due to his sensory issues with various types of food. This decision not only affects this particular case but also highlights the flawed nature of our immigration system, raising serious concerns.
The judge approved the father’s appeal against deportation due to his right to family life ‘being violated.’
Albanian Klevis Disha, 39, arrived in the UK illegally in February 2001 when he was a 15-year-old unaccompanied minor.
He entered the UK using a false name and claimed to have been born in the former Yugoslavia. Although his asylum claim was rejected, he obtained UK citizenship in 2007 after being granted exceptional leave to remain, followed by indefinite leave to remain. In 2017, he was imprisoned for two years after being caught with £250,000 in cash.
At that time, the Home Office ordered that he be deported to Albania and stripped of his UK citizenship. However, he appealed and was backed by a judge at an immigration tribunal.
The judge ruled that deportation would be unfair to his son—known only as ‘C’. The court decided it was better for ‘C’ to stay in the UK rather than be separated from his father or be forced to go with him to Albania.
‘C’ reportedly experienced sensory difficulties with certain clothing—such as socks—and specific types of food, which caused him to refuse many activities. The court considered these issues a significant factor in the deportation case, leading to the decision that it would be ‘unduly harsh’ for ‘C’ to be mandated to move back with his father.
The court’s decision, based on evidence from a trainee educational psychologist, a neighbour, and a family friend, and lacking a formal diagnosis of special educational needs, is a cause for concern. The evidence presented in the court was insufficient to establish ‘C’s sensory issues as a formal diagnosis, raising questions about the court’s decision-making process.
This situation is unacceptable; however, nothing will change until the UK withdraws from the 1951 UN Convention on Refugees and the European Convention on Human Rights.
This case is not just a shocking story but a wake-up call for the British public to understand the gravity of our immigration laws and their impact on our society.
It’s frustrating to see that none of the three main parties will do anything about this, leaving the British Democrats as the party with the backbone to intervene and stop this madness. We need change, and we need it now!
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Foreign chicken nuggets. I’m sure they are really different to indigenous chicken nuggets, well, enough lunacy for now. Albanians run the cocaine trade in the UK, amongst many other crime rackets, and there is no war in Albania. So more fake asylum seeking.