
Migrant won't be deported because of his ‘Covid trauma'
A Ghanaian asylum seeker has won a human rights claim to remain in the UK because of his 'trauma' from contracting Covid.
Winfred Kwabla Dogbey, 52, claimed he could not be returned to Ghana because the effects of the virus on his health had been so severe that he would not get the necessary treatment in his home country.
He was diagnosed with PTSD after he was hospitalised with the virus in 2020 and was part of a rehabilitation programme in the UK to treat his 'post Covid-19 syndrome'.
An immigration tribunal was told the type of treatment that he needed was 'practically non-existent' in Ghana and the available psychiatric care was 'insufficient' to meet demand.
After hearing of how Mr Dogbey would likely experience a 'rapid and severe decline in his mental health' if he were to return to Ghana, the upper tier tribunal backed his claim to stay in the UK.
The tribunal accepted it would be a breach of his Article 3 rights under the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR), which bars persecution, inhuman treatment and torture.
The case, disclosed in court papers, is the latest example exposed by The Telegraph where illegal migrants or convicted foreign criminals have used human rights laws to remain in the UK or halt their deportations.
There are a record 41,987 outstanding immigration appeals, largely on human rights grounds, which Labour has pledged to clear by halving the time it takes for them to come to court to 24 days.

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