Rafeeq who was born in the UK and brought up in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, was flown back to Nigeria along with his mother Bola Fatumbi in January after their long-running asylum claim failed.
But in a landmark ruling which could undermine Theresa May’s so-called ‘deport first, appeal later’ immigration policy, a senior judge, Justice Cranston, ordered that the Home Office foot the bill for tracking down Rafeeq and Ms Fatumbi, 45, and bringing them back to the UK. Ms Fatumbi says she first came to Britain in 1991.
She was later found to have left the country and returned at least once before she was caught and questioned by immigration officers after she was found working illegally in a shop in London.
Her application for leave to remain in the UK was rejected in 2008 and in the same year she was jailed for nine months for using a false Dutch passport. Rafeeq was born in Britain in 2009 and his mother says his father left her when she was two months pregnant and she has not seen him since.
In 2010, the mother and son applied for asylum on the basis that the mother would be persecuted as a single mother or even labelled a witch if she was returned to Nigeria
Their claim was rejected, as was an appeal, and the mother and son – who has been to nursery and primary school in Britain – were deported in January. Mr Justice Cranston, a former Labour MP who is now a High Court judge, has now found the Home Office had not made the boy’s welfare their ‘primary consideration’.
In a subsequent ruling on costs, the judges said: ‘Considering the very unusual circumstances in the round we have decided that the Secretary of State should be ordered to take all reasonable steps to ensure the return of RA and his mother to this country.’ The landmark ruling, which will lead to further hearings of the case in the High Court and Court of Appeal, could change the way deportations involving children are dealt with in future.
Judith Dennis, policy manager for the Refugee Council, told The Independent ‘We have this rhetoric about deportation and people being able to appeal from outside the country, but what this ruling says is that you need to balance the need for immigration control against the best interests of the child.’ A Home Office spokesman said: ‘We are unable to comment due to the ongoing nature of this case.’
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