AN Eritrean migrant who launched a final minute authorized bid to dam his deportation has been faraway from the nation.
The man was deported to France this morning below the “one in, one out” deal after dropping a High Court bid to have his elimination blocked.
The Home Office has confirmed the Eritrean man, who can’t be named for authorized causes, was deported this morning.
Human rights attorneys made an eleventh hour utility in opposition to his elimination yesterday afternoon, arguing that he could also be a sufferer of trafficking.
The migrant claimed he needed to flee Eritrea as a result of conscription and was later “stopped and kidnapped and compelled to work” in Libya.
The UK’s National Referral Mechanism (NRM) – which identifies and assesses victims of slavery and trafficking – discovered there was “no cheap grounds” to recommend he had been trafficked.
But Sonali Naik KC, the unnamed man’s counsel, stated the choice had been “rushed” and there was a “critical difficulty to be tried” as as to whether it was lawful.
She requested for “interim aid” – a brief block on his elimination
High Court decide Mr Justice Sheldon dominated in favour of the Home Office.
He stated: “The utility for interim aid is refused.
“There’s no critical difficulty to be tried on this case and the stability of comfort plainly favours the claimant’s elimination to France in accordance with the choice made by the Secretary of State.”
The asylum seeker was deported this morning on a flight certain for France.

