A WOMAN-beating alcoholic dodged deportation after claiming it would hurt his family life — despite being unmarried and having no kids.
Konrad Makocki, 37, used European human rights laws to say he had to be near his twin sister and nephew, 12.
The six-times convicted Pole, who had offered no evidence of any formal rehabilitation, insisted he was “a father figure” to the boy.
Makocki, who arrived in the UK in 2009 under EU rules, had been caged for ten months in December 2021 for beating his ex-partner.
He received a deportation order in 2022 and the Home Office refused his initial appeal, after which the migrant took his case to the first-tier tribunal.
Judge Nawraz Karbani granted him the reprieve in September 2022, saying that being sent to Poland would be “unduly harsh” on the nephew.
Reform MP Rupert Lowe hit out: “I don’t care if he likes his nephew or not.
“They can talk on the phone, or his nephew can go to Poland with him.”
“Britain is currently a laughing stock. We need to get serious. If our law prevents these deportations, change the sodding law.
“This must include a full review of the immigration judges who are pushing their own political agenda to the detriment of the British people.
“Any who are found to be doing so must be sacked.”
The Home Office was given the right last month to have a new hearing of the case, meaning Makocki’s appeal will be heard again by a different judge.
GettyWoman-beater alcoholic Konrad Makocki dodged deportation after claiming it would hurt his family life[/caption] Published: [#item_custom_pubDate]