The Daily Mail reported that the Ghanaian woman won her appeal to stay in Britain under human rights laws which puts the rights of her children (family life) before the Home Office right to deport a convicted foreign criminal.
The 33-year-old former nurse had been jailed for causing the baby’s death,
yet has now been granted anonymity by the Judge.
The Home Office said the ruling was ‘disappointing’ and are considering appealing against the decision in the higher Court of Appeal.
Here’s her story. After serving her three-year prison sentence,
she was released in April last year to look after her three surviving children.
The Home Secretary Theresa May has made several attempts to
remove the woman, who can be referred to only as GHA.
This case, the latest in a long line of successful appeals
by convicted foreign criminals, will raise protests about the use of the
European Convention on Human Rights to avoid deportation.
The African nurse came to the UK on a student visa in 2000
and remained in the UK. During her trial it was revealed that she used a small
milk jug to tip baby rice African corn porridge and chicken soup into her
child’s mouth.
Conservative MP and Lawyer Dominic Raab called for the
reining-in of human rights laws, and said: ‘Many people will look at this case,
a mother jailed for force-feeding her baby and feel it reflects the warped
nature of our human rights laws today.
‘The argument is that she is being separated from her kids
but not only was she separated from them in prison but there were also care
proceedings brought against her.
'The children have also spent periods of time in Ghana so
the arguments for not deporting her fall away. It shows how the judges have
expanded and shifted the goalposts from human rights in a way that is pretty
arbitrary and perverse.
‘It does not reflect anything written into the ECHR and
certainly not anything Parliament has agreed to.
‘Article 8 is being used by convicted, jailed criminals to
stay in this country. This isn’t the only case. I actually think the article
can be a threat to family life, in particular vulnerable children and
partners.’
"Crazy" human rights laws
Raab pointed out that around 90 per cent of successful
deportation appeals, up to 400 appeal cases each year, are using ‘Article 8’: ‘Article 8 is the
single biggest problem for deporting a serious foreign criminal and this is
something that has only really developed in the last seven years. What will it
be like in another seven? It could be almost impossible to deport someone.’
Another MP Peter Bone described the use of human rights law
to protect the nurse ‘crazy’. He added: ‘The ECHR was never intended to
protect people who carry out terrible crimes from being sent back to their own
country.’
The three-year sentence handed to GHA at the trial in 2011
meant that under Home Office rules she should have been up for automatic
deportation.
However, attempts to deport her following her release from
prison were rejected after she appealed and won her case at a lower immigration
tribunal in February.
When the Home Office lodged an appeal to overturn the
decision at the Upper Tribunal Immigration and Asylum Chamber last month, the
earlier decision was upheld.
Unbelievably, a social services report deemed her children were
under ‘no significant risk of harm’ form the child killer and described the
family as a ‘close, committed unit with strong cultural and religious beliefs’.
Her partner was granted custody of the three children following care
proceedings in 2010 and the family has lived in a three-bed London home since
GHA’s release.
The Mail added that in her trial it emerged that GHA, who
had already applied for indefinite leave to remain (ILR) in the UK when her child
died, had paid ‘little attention’ to social services who had been involved with
the family.
It added: ‘Through the recently passed Immigration Act, we
are making it easier to remove people from the UK and harder for individuals to
prolong their stay with spurious appeals, by cutting the number of appeal
rights from 17 to four.
‘It will also ensure that judges deal with Article 8 claims
in the right way — making clear the right to a family life is not regarded as
absolute and unqualified.’ Source: Daily Mail.
Judges are often criticized for their human rights appeal judgments, but at the end of the day they are only upholding the law. If her children, who may now be British Citizens, have grown up in the UK it would be difficult to see how a judge could rule that she should be deported under the current Immigration Rules and Human Rights laws.
If you need advice on any immigration matter, EU or UK immigration law, or want to appeal against a refusal, call Cynthia Barker on 07850 307687 or 0208 731 5972 or email her your details to immigration@londonccs.com. Cynthia Barker is a qualified OISC Registered Immigration Adviser, with 15 years experience in immigration matters, with a team of Level 3 Immigration Law Practitioners, Concept Care Solutions, Middlesex House, 29-45 High Street, Edgware, HA8 7UU.
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