Newsflash:

Afghan Migrant’s Credibility Questioned After Using Fake Passports, Yet Case Reopened

Asylum seeker entered UK on Pakistani passport wins fresh hearing claiming Afghan nationality under Article 8 ECHR.

2 min read

Afghan asylum UK claim

A Pakistani family claiming Afghan nationality wins a fresh UK asylum hearing under Article 8 ECHR [IC: by AFP]

January 7, 2026

An asylum seeker who entered the UK with his family on a Pakistani passport which he took fraudulently has won a fresh hearing after claiming that he is actually an Afghan national. He argues that deportation would violate his family’s rights under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).

The man initially lost his case at a first-tier immigration tribunal, but an upper tribunal overturned the ruling, citing multiple legal errors. The case will now be reheard by a different judge, reopening his bid to remain in the UK.

‏Court Revisits Taliban Risk and Family Rights Claim

‏After entering the UK, the man applied for asylum, stating that the Pakistani documents had been obtained by deception and that he would face danger if returned to Afghanistan. The Home Office rejected the claim, and a lower tribunal upheld that decision.

‏The original judge ruled that the asylum seeker held both Pakistani and Afghan nationality and dismissed his claim that he faced a threat from the Taliban, citing a lack of corroborating evidence.

‏However, the upper tribunal disagreed. It accepted arguments that Afghan law forbids dual citizenship and that there was evidence of the Taliban targeting individuals who had previously fled to Pakistan.

‏Background: Article 8 Appeals and Immigration Disputes

‏In the past, migrants have frequently relied on Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which protects the right to family life, to challenge deportation decisions in the UK.

‏The upper tribunal judge described it as “simply irrational” for the lower court to suggest that there was no effective difference for the children whether they lived in the UK, Pakistan, or Afghanistan, given current conditions under Taliban rule.

‏The tribunal ordered that the case be reheard, marking the latest example of how disputed nationality claims and Article 8 arguments continue to shape Britain’s asylum system.

Read more : https://htnworld.com/afghanistan-pakistan-security-accord-khalilzad/

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