This is why we have the trial, so they can get these ridiculous challenges out of the way and establish some case law.
terrordactyl1971 on
Poor old Labour, can’t get a fucking break these days
Gold_Motor_6985 on
He won the chance to present arguments that he’s a victim of modern day slavery. I mean, if you’re deporting someone and they tell you they’re being trafficked, wouldn’t it be reasonable to hear them out?
But I guess the “get them out” crowd doesn’t want to wait.
Astriania on
> his lawyers successfully argued he needed more time to present evidence that he might have been the victim of modern day slavery
In France? Nah, get out with that.
This is the sort of nonsense that people can clearly see is taking the piss, and will result in them voting for clowns like Reform who promise to ride a coach and horses through the laws that are having the piss taken in this way. If it is really illegal to deport anyone then people will vote to change that law, and right-thinking people really shouldn’t want us to end up there.
Aside from the question of the individual case, the very idea that we should have to conduct a detailed investigation into the circumstances of every individual illegal arrival is completely ridiculous. That would make it essentially impossible to deport anyone – which I suspect is what they actually want to achieve (to the poster who was asking me for examples of that earlier, here’s a good one).
Low_Map4314 on
Well, here comes Tommy Robinson.. again and again… until this shit gets resolved. If at all possible
Tasty_Importance_216 on
This is a joke how do we even know that he’s from Eritrea. I mean at this rate we might as well go to these countries and govern them ourselves
BugPsychological4836 on
How embarrasing, instead of one in one out its one in stay forever
GhostRiders on
UK Government could easily done this the same as Germany, France and many other EU countries but noooo, that would have been too easy.
Labour love shooting themselves in the foot
Mysterious_Evening9 on
well, that’s the pilot scheme down in the bin lmao
DarwinPaddled on
Another example of transnational treaties and legislation butting heads with the very idea of democracy.
AnalThermometer on
As with all these issues, Australia had figured it out long ago and there’s zero excuse for us not to follow given we both have parliamentary systems. Their home secretary has veto power over tribunals and can make it very difficult to stop deportation in these situations. The benefit of not needing the ECHR.
eldomtom2 on
And by “wins block” what the BBC means he’s won a temporary block pending a further decision.
adonWPV on
Its always Eritreans, what exactly is going on there that they absolutely have to come to the UK.
13 commenti
This is why we have the trial, so they can get these ridiculous challenges out of the way and establish some case law.
Poor old Labour, can’t get a fucking break these days
He won the chance to present arguments that he’s a victim of modern day slavery. I mean, if you’re deporting someone and they tell you they’re being trafficked, wouldn’t it be reasonable to hear them out?
But I guess the “get them out” crowd doesn’t want to wait.
> his lawyers successfully argued he needed more time to present evidence that he might have been the victim of modern day slavery
In France? Nah, get out with that.
This is the sort of nonsense that people can clearly see is taking the piss, and will result in them voting for clowns like Reform who promise to ride a coach and horses through the laws that are having the piss taken in this way. If it is really illegal to deport anyone then people will vote to change that law, and right-thinking people really shouldn’t want us to end up there.
Aside from the question of the individual case, the very idea that we should have to conduct a detailed investigation into the circumstances of every individual illegal arrival is completely ridiculous. That would make it essentially impossible to deport anyone – which I suspect is what they actually want to achieve (to the poster who was asking me for examples of that earlier, here’s a good one).
Well, here comes Tommy Robinson.. again and again… until this shit gets resolved. If at all possible
This is a joke how do we even know that he’s from Eritrea. I mean at this rate we might as well go to these countries and govern them ourselves
How embarrasing, instead of one in one out its one in stay forever
UK Government could easily done this the same as Germany, France and many other EU countries but noooo, that would have been too easy.
Labour love shooting themselves in the foot
well, that’s the pilot scheme down in the bin lmao
Another example of transnational treaties and legislation butting heads with the very idea of democracy.
As with all these issues, Australia had figured it out long ago and there’s zero excuse for us not to follow given we both have parliamentary systems. Their home secretary has veto power over tribunals and can make it very difficult to stop deportation in these situations. The benefit of not needing the ECHR.
And by “wins block” what the BBC means he’s won a temporary block pending a further decision.
Its always Eritreans, what exactly is going on there that they absolutely have to come to the UK.