A Zimbabwean migrant who spent 14 years living in the UK despite a long record of robbery and violent offences is now facing deportation after losing his final human-rights appeal. The man, who arrived in Britain at age 11 to join his mother, committed his first robbery at just 16 and went on to build a troubling criminal history that included robbing schoolchildren, burglary, drug offences, and a violent attack on a bus driver. Tribunal documents revealed that he repeatedly targeted young victims on the street, stealing phones and credit cards in what a judge described as “cowardly and nasty” crimes that left lasting emotional harm.
One of his most serious offences involved a bus driver who suffered a prolonged assault after refusing to hand over a cash box. The judge noted that the attack had a profound effect on the victim, who was simply carrying out his duties. Despite being warned in 2011 that he would be deported after his first robbery conviction, authorities never enforced the order. He later committed more offences, including a drug-related conviction in 2018 that resulted in a three-year prison sentence. The migrant claimed the instability caused by his immigration status made it difficult to work or study, but the judge said his repeated offending showed a continued pattern of harmful behaviour.
In 2022, he temporarily avoided deportation when a tribunal ruled that removing him would be unlawful because he had become “socially and culturally integrated” in the UK. But the Home Office appealed, and the case was sent to the Upper Tribunal. Judge Gaenor Bruce reviewed his full history and concluded that the seriousness and persistence of his crimes carried significant weight and outweighed any claim to remain in the country. She emphasised that street robbery, especially against schoolchildren, leaves deep emotional scars and that domestic burglary is a serious violation of personal security.
The tribunal also considered the argument that returning him to Zimbabwe would put him at risk because he is gay. Although male homosexuality is criminalised there, the judge found that prosecutions are rare and that LGBTQ+ groups, such as Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe, are allowed to operate. She said these conditions did not amount to the “very significant obstacles” required to prevent deportation under UK law.
Judge Bruce acknowledged that the migrant had expressed remorse, but she found no reliable evidence that he had changed his behaviour or addressed his long-standing pattern of offending. She stated that he had been committing crimes since he was a teenager and that there was insufficient proof he had taken meaningful steps toward rehabilitation.
After weighing all the factors, the tribunal dismissed his human-rights appeal. With the Home Office’s challenge now successful, the Zimbabwean national faces deportation after more than a decade of living in the UK.
