Court system which let chemical attacker Abdul Ezedi stay in UK ‘must be opened up to allow more scrutiny of decisions’

THE court system which let chemical attacker Abdul Ezedi stay in the UK must be opened up to allow more scrutiny of decisions, experts say.

The 35-year-old sex offender, who drowned in the Thames after hurling chemicals at an ex-partner and her children in South London, won his case at an anonymised first-tier asylum tribunal.

The Muslim funeral for attacker Ezedi

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The Muslim funeral for attacker EzediCredit: BBC/UNPIXS

Rulings from this lower tier of tribunals are not published.

Most are heard with just four people in the room — a judge, the migrant, their lawyer, and a Home Office civil servant.

Journalists can apply for a copy of a decision but requests must be approved by court officials.

Last year, 37,000 cases were heard by first-tier asylum tribunals, which sit in 12 places including London, Cardiff, Bradford and Newcastle.

Ministry of Justice stats show they allowed 49 per cent of appeals compared with 34 per cent 15 years ago.

The Sun on Sunday found a string of migrants with questionable claims were not revealed to the public until they were heard by the upper tier, the findings of which are routinely published.

One criminal who illegally sneaked into Britain twice had his appeal to stay upheld by a first-tier judge.

And a firearms and drug crook called CSM successfully argued he was no longer a threat — despite entering the UK with false documents a year after being flown home from a stint in prison.

Last night, campaigners backed calls to allow the public to access all judgments.

Expert David Spencer said: “Findings of all immigration tribunals should absolutely be published.”

Cops find body of Clapham chemical fugitive Abdul Ezedi in Thames after horror attack on mum & daughters

Former Cabinet minister Mark Francois said: “Results of court cases are published so why not of immigration tribunals?”

A barrister, who has represented clients at tribunal hearings said: “Where judges produce rulings that require or deserve scrutiny, the public and the media should have the chance to do that.”

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