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Migrant who beat wife & sexually assaulted stranger can FINALLY be deported 23 years after first asylum claim rejected

A FAILED migrant who beat his wife, sexually assaulted a stranger and dealt crack cocaine and heroin can finally be deported – 23 years after his first UK asylum claim was rejected.

The serial crook, named only as GRB, arrived in the UK from Iran in November 2000 and staved off a deportation order for 14 years after being refused asylum six different times.

Home Secretary James Cleverly

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Home Secretary James CleverlyCredit: Peter Jordan

He even managed to serve three prison stints, marry and have three children before a judge ordered he be flown home and barred from coming back.

However, the thug will dodge being dispatched to Rwanda as he has been in the UK for too long.

After sneaking into the country, the man’s first humanitarian bid was thrown out after the migrant refused to speak with officials during his Home Office interview.

He opted to appeal, buying him another eight months in the country, but was turned down again in January 2002 when the dopey migrant no-showed a tribunal hearing.

Instead of being swiftly removed, the man was allowed to continue lodging claims until November 2005 when he was convicted of two counts of sexual assault at Sheffield Crown Court.

GRB was caged for six months and placed on the sex offenders register for 10 years.

In 2009, he was jailed again on three counts of supplying the Class A drug cocaine – getting four years.

The length of the term triggered an automatic deportation notice, which he appealed by making another failed asylum claim.

Officials still chose not to jet him home and only two years after his release from prison he was caged at Peterborough magistrates’ court for supplying crack cocaine and heroin.

He later married a Brit woman with the couple sharing three children.

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The wedding triggered another asylum bid, which failed because of his storied criminal record.

Their relationship was plunged into chaos in late 2018 when Ms M kicked the asylum seeker out after making domestic abuse claims to children’s services.

GBR was made to attend a “domestic abuse perpetrator programme” and chose not to challenge the allegation he attacked his partner at an immigration tribunal.

At a hearing earlier this month, the man’s lawyers argued the Home Office had missed their chance to deport him as he had been in the UK for ten years since a deportation order was issued.

Judge I P Jarvis ruled he was not “legally removable” for most of the decade because of his stints in prison or constant asylum appeals.

He added the man had “been residing illegally in the UK since 2001 and since 2010 in defiance of a Deportation Order made against him.”

Ordering his removal, the Judge ruled the thug had “not shown that there are very compelling circumstances which outweigh the very significant public interest in deportation.”

Senior Tory MP Nigel Mills said: “The thing that really annoys people is that he’s got here, has no right to stay here but has been here for over 20 years.

“If there’s a decision that you can’t stay, there needs to be a quick deportation instead of dragging it out like this.

“If you come here and abuse our hospitality by committing serious criminal offences, get out.”

He added there was a case for illegal migrants who commit serious offences to be sent to a safe third country, like Rwanda, if they cannot be returned home.

The MP said: “If they’ve come to the UK and blown their chance they should be returned home.

“If you really can’t do that, then send them to a safe third country.

Read more on the Irish Sun

“If you have committed serious offences, most people think it doesn’t matter where they go, so long as they aren’t in the country.”

The Home Office said it does not comment on individual cases.

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