What's new

UK inks deal to return ‘criminals’ to Pakistan

hoshiarpurexpress

T20I Debutant
Joined
Jul 29, 2020
Runs
6,313
LONDON: The UK signed a major deal with Pakistan on Wednesday, under which foreign criminals and immigration offenders from the UK can be returned to Pakistan.

UK Home Secretary Priti Patel hailed the development on Twitter, saying that “I’m proud to have signed a new landmark agreement with our Pakistani friends to return foreign criminals and immigration offenders from the UK to Pakistan. This deal shows our #NewPlanForImmigration in action, as we deliver for the British people”.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">🇬🇧🤝🇵🇰 BREAKING:<br><br>I'm proud to have signed a new landmark agreement with our Pakistani friends to return foreign criminals and immigration offenders from the UK to Pakistan.<br><br>This deal shows our <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NewPlanForImmigration?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#NewPlanForImmigration</a> in action, as we deliver for the British people. <a href="https://t.co/UBK7gZ7Z9X">pic.twitter.com/UBK7gZ7Z9X</a></p>— Priti Patel (@pritipatel) <a href="https://twitter.com/pritipatel/status/1559889609454243842?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 17, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

“I make no apology for removing dangerous foreign criminals and immigration offenders who have no right to remain in the UK. The British public have quite rightly had enough of people abusing our laws and gaming the system so we can’t remove them,” the statement quoted Ms Patel as saying.

“This agreement, which I am proud to have signed with our Pakistani friends, shows the New Plan for Immigration in action and the government delivering.”

Legal expert says agreement will allow Britain to deport ‘unwanted persons’, even those who have no ties, to Pakistan

“Our new Borders Act will go further and help end the cycle of last-minute claims and appeals that can delay removals.”

A statement from the Pakistani High Commission said: “The agreement renews and updates, in a bilateral context an earlier agreement between Pakistan and the European Community regarding readmission of persons residing without authorisation concluded in Oct 2009. The bilateral agreement was necessitated by the exit of the UK from the European Union.”

A photo tweeted with the announcement showed Ms Patel at a signing ceremony with Interior Secretary Yousaf Naseem Khokhar. A statement said the home secretary met with Mr Khokhar and the Pakistan High Commissioner to the UK, Moazzam Ahmad Khan, to sign the reciprocal agreement.

Under the new plan, Pakistani nationals with no legal right to remain in the UK, including criminals, failed asylum seekers and immigration offenders, will reportedly be removed.

The statement said Pakistan nationals make up the seventh largest number of foreign criminals in prisons in England and Wales totalling nearly 3pc of the foreign national offender population.

“The agreement underlines both countries’ ongoing commitment to tackling the issue of illegal migration and the significant threats it poses to both nations. The agreement also includes ongoing work to improve and expand UK-Pakistani law enforcement cooperation,” it said.

Bad news for Pakistan
Though Pakistan has demanded an extradition treaty with the UK for years, this agreement falls short of that. Some lawyers see it as a blow to Pakistan, which may now see an influx of deported criminals from the UK — even those who have never visited Pakistan.

“This is a very negative step for Pakistan,” UK-based immigration law expert Mohammad Amjad told Dawn. “Last year, the Pakistani government was presented with this deal and refused to sign it, because fundamentally it will allow serious criminals to be deported to Pakistan without critical information sharing. This will present huge problems for Pakistan.”

Mr Amjad cited the case of Sohail Ayaz, a convicted pedophile and child abuser who was deported to Pakistan from the UK, but exploited the absence of an information-sharing mechanism and continued his criminal activities in Pakistan. In 2019, he was arrested for the rape and assault of upto 30 minors, despite being convicted of similar offences by a UK court in 2008.

He said: “Such issues will increase. Some criminals may be deported who have no links to Pakistan, and they will pose an even greater threat as they have no family network once they are sent back. The only beneficiary is the UK.”

The deal with Pakistan came after deals were signed with Albania and India last year, as well as Serbia and Nigeria this year. Pakistan’s deal appears similar to the agreements signed with Albania, Serbia and Nigeria where illegal immigrants and criminal offenders will be removed from the UK.

The deal with India, however, was more of a migration partnership deal, which allowed young British and Indian nationals to work and live in each other’s countries.

Published in Dawn, August 18th, 2022
 
Hasn’t this always been an option for the UK justice system anyway?

But yes, Patel is playing to the xenophobic send-‘em-back merchants.
 
The previous legitimate govt refused to sign it for a reason but this imported govt caved in to their masters.
 
Nothing wrong in deporting criminals to their land of origin in itself, but from Pakistan POV it does look like the bootlickers are back.
 
This is literally a post Brexit version of what could be done previously.
 
I don't see anything wrong with criminals being returned to their country of ethnicity. Are criminals from other countries also gonna be deported too? If not then Pakistanis have every right to complain.
 
Link here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/presiden...ion-on-entry-of-certain-nonimmigrant-workers/

This effectively means the H-1B program is shuttered for the time being and will be minimized going forward unless it is a truly in-demand hire who is worth the extra visa fee.

India should be pleased as all the excellent tech talent they have will now stay home, boosting Indian IT industry in India.
More talent will accumulate in India over time as it is my understanding (though it's not clear from the EO) that the $100k fee also applies to renewals.

this should ensure that many more Americans return to the IT workforce after years of layoffs, bringing high-paying jobs back to Americans.

I suspect Cognizant, TCS, and Infosys have a very long weekend and even longer week ahead of them as they attempt to resolve this disruption to their operations.

I warned of this a few months ago. The mood here is not only about those from Latin America.
 
A senior Pakistani-origin doctor who left a patient midway through surgery to engage in sexual activity with a nurse has been cleared by a UK medical tribunal to resume his medical career. However, a written warning will remain on his registration for two years. In 2023, consultant anaesthetist Suhail Anjum left a patient in the operation theatre (OT) to engage in sex with a nurse in another surgical theatre. The case was being heard by the UK's medical tribunal.

During the recent hearing, Anjum, father of three, admitted to leaving the patient and engaging in sexual activity with the nurse. He had travelled back to Pakistan and can now return to practice in the UK.

Anjum was discovered "in a compromising position" with a nurse in the operating theatre at Tameside General Hospital in Greater Manchester on September 16, 2023, The Daily Mail reported.

The tribunal in Manchester was told that the 44-year-old doctor left the patient, who was having keyhole surgery to remove a gall bladder, because he knew that Nurse C "was likely to be nearby", according to the report.

Andrew Molloy, representing the General Medical Council, said the 44-year-old Pakistani doctor left midway through the procedure for a comfort break.

A disciplinary panel has now found that Anjum's 'deplorable' actions amounted to serious misconduct, but concluded that there was a "very low risk" of them being repeated, the London-based tabloid reported on Tuesday.

The Tribunal ruled that a written warning should remain on the doctor's registration for two years, saying his fitness to practise medicine was not impaired, according to the report.

Last week he told a Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) disciplinary tribunal he wanted to resume his career in the UK and relocate with his family after they had since moved to his native Pakistan where he worked as a doctor, The Guardian reported.

The tribunal acknowledged that no harm was caused to patients, but concluded that the doctor's actions were serious enough to constitute misconduct.

The tribunal chair, Rebecca Miller, said his actions, while they did not harm the patient's safety, were "significant enough to amount to misconduct that was serious", The Guardian reported.

The doctor, who now works in Pakistan, was seen tying the cord of his trousers, while his colleague — referred to as Nurse C — was reportedly found with her trousers around her knees and her underwear on display when the pair were caught off-guard by another nurse, according to the London-based tabloid.

According to The Daily Mail, tribunal representative Molloy stated that a scrub nurse, referred to as Nurse NT, had stepped out to retrieve equipment in preparation for the next procedure in Theatre Number Eight. Upon returning, she discovered Suhail Anjum and Nurse C in a compromising position.

Shocked by what she witnessed, Nurse NT immediately left the area and returned to Theatre Number Five. The incident was subsequently reported, and Anjum was questioned.

During the tribunal hearing, Molloy confirmed that Anjum admitted to leaving a patient mid-operation and engaging in "sexual activity" with Nurse C.

He began working in the UK in 2011, holding positions in Bristol, Milton Keynes, and Dartford, before joining the Tameside and Glossop Integrated Trust in 2015.

He left the Trust in October 2024 and worked in Liverpool before returning to Pakistan in January, The Daily Mail reported.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


 
Sabaash! And some people wonder about the motives of Tommy Robinson.
 
Back
Top