Iraqi who killed two doctors wins right to stay in UK

Monday, 25th January 2010

Human Rights Act - a rogues charter!

Held at a maximum security unit at Rampton Hospital
An Iraqi immigrant who stabbed to death two NHS doctors has won the right to stay in Britain - What?

An immigration judge ruled Laith Alani, a 41-year-old paranoid schizophrenic, could pose a danger to people in his homeland - So its ok for him to be a danger and a drain on our resources but not the Iraqi ones then

A tribunal found deportation would also breach his "human rights" - were these the same human rights he showed to his victims then? Unfortunately - The government must accept the immigration court's judgement - despite how wrong it is!

Alani has spent 19 years in the secure hospital for the killings of cosmetic surgeons Kenneth Paton and Michael Masser who were attacked at Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield, West Yorkshire, after Alani claimed to have received "a command from Allah" - here we go again! - "ALLAH" - surely "gods" don't send messages to Murder do they as devine as they are?

Alani was sentenced to an indefinite term of imprisonment in a maximum-security unit at Rampton Hospital, near Nottingham, in 1991. What a waste of tax payers money this is - pity he didn't get to meet this "ALLAH" chap at the time!THEN - despite being a paranoid schizophrenic he managed to appeal to the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) where a panel led by senior immigration judge Lance Waumsley ruled he could remain in the UK. 

Asylum means seeking refuge in the first "safe" country you arrive in - not the one with the "biggest suckers"! If discharged, restricted patients are subject to intensive supervision by doctors and mental health professionals - another waste of money! It is understood one of the reasons given was that if Alani was sent back to Iraq, he would be unlikely to receive the drugs needed to keep his mental illness under control. So its up to us Brits again not only to tolerate a murderer but give him a safe home and drugs! Anymore? - new car maybe!

Immigration minister Phil Woolas said: "The UK Border Agency vigorously supported deportation, but when the courts insist an individual cannot be removed, we have to accept their judgement."

The Ministry of Justice would not comment on the individual case but said restricted patients were carefully managed for public protection and underwent rigorous risk assessment - what like the risk assessment they did before the two Doctors were killed?

The Secretary of State has the power to recall a conditionally discharged patient to hospital immediately if he receives information that the patient's risk to others is increasing as a result of his mental disorder. Its just a pity he doesn't have the power to send him back to Iraq and let them deal with this problem in their way

It seems the only people with a "Mental disorder"are the British allowing this kind of thing to continue time and time again!

Glenn Tingle

 

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