An illegal immigrant who killed a brilliant young writer by driving into her at 60mph cannot be deported because it would breach his human rights.
Ahsan Sabri, 28, was unlicensed and not properly insured when he roared through a red light and ploughed into Oxford University graduate Sophie Warne.
The 30-year-old died instantly from a broken neck. She had published five books, was writing her first novel and was about to announce her engagement.
But the High Court overturned an immigration tribunal decision that Sabri - who had overstayed his visa - should be sent home to Pakistan.
The judge ruled that deporting him would breach his right to 'respect for family life' as he had married a British woman in 2003 and had a daughter, born last May, with her.
Lord Justice Sir Martin Moore-Bick said that if he left Britain, Sabri's wife, Laura Gleeson, 25, a graphic designer, from Essex, and their baby would probably follow and that would 'interfere with their private and family life'.
He accepted Sabri's claim that his wife may have trouble finding a job in Pakistan and could suffer ' broadly based threats and difficulties' as a result of being a Christian.
This section of human rights law also prevents Britain from deporting Learco Chindamo, the Italian-born killer of London headmaster Philip Lawrence.
Chindamo has lived in Britain since he was five and claims to have his strongest family ties here, but Sabri moved here when he was 18.
As such, the High Court's decision threatens to set a precedent in which anyone facing deportation simply needs to marry a British person to stay. continues here
Ahsan Sabri, 28, was unlicensed and not properly insured when he roared through a red light and ploughed into Oxford University graduate Sophie Warne.
The 30-year-old died instantly from a broken neck. She had published five books, was writing her first novel and was about to announce her engagement.
But the High Court overturned an immigration tribunal decision that Sabri - who had overstayed his visa - should be sent home to Pakistan.
The judge ruled that deporting him would breach his right to 'respect for family life' as he had married a British woman in 2003 and had a daughter, born last May, with her.
Lord Justice Sir Martin Moore-Bick said that if he left Britain, Sabri's wife, Laura Gleeson, 25, a graphic designer, from Essex, and their baby would probably follow and that would 'interfere with their private and family life'.
He accepted Sabri's claim that his wife may have trouble finding a job in Pakistan and could suffer ' broadly based threats and difficulties' as a result of being a Christian.
This section of human rights law also prevents Britain from deporting Learco Chindamo, the Italian-born killer of London headmaster Philip Lawrence.
Chindamo has lived in Britain since he was five and claims to have his strongest family ties here, but Sabri moved here when he was 18.
As such, the High Court's decision threatens to set a precedent in which anyone facing deportation simply needs to marry a British person to stay. continues here
We are to suffer this mans presence it seems, because he has a partner with a penchant for miscegenation, a predilection offering no defence, should she reside in her parners native land. That in itself tells us much however; the most abhorrent aspect to this case is that we must have “respect for his family life” whilst he had none for the poor victim, will we ever get up off our knees, throw these idiots out of office and start our much needed healing process. Do not we have the right to family life, unmolested by murdering immigrants, malignant leftists or warped egalitarians, or must we live on our knees for ever. 14
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