(UK) — A UK judge ordered the extradition of Omar Ali Noori to Austria, after the Home Office granted the Afghan national indefinite leave to remain despite a rape conviction.
Noori, 31, is held at Wandsworth Prison following the extradition ruling, and he is set to launch an appeal against the decision.
The case has drawn attention because it involves an Afghan migrant whose Austrian rape conviction did not come to light during his UK asylum process, raising questions about screening and decision-making.
Noori was arrested in Linz, Austria in 2018 on allegations of rape, and later faced criminal proceedings there.
After being released on bail, he fled Austria and arrived in Britain in 2019.
The Home Office granted him indefinite leave to remain in 2023, even though the Austrian conviction meant he faced a prison sentence there.
During the asylum proceedings, Noori provided false information to immigration authorities, using four different identities and providing five separate dates of birth on official documents.
When questioned about his criminal history and whether he was a fugitive, he denied both allegations, and a judge later found his answers were “clearly not accurate.”
The Home Office acknowledged failures in a statement and pointed to its approach when new information emerges after status is granted.
“We review individuals’ immigration status should new information come to light that it was obtained through fraud, false representation, or concealment of a material fact,” the Home Office said.
A Home Office spokeswoman added: “We will not allow foreign criminals and illegal migrants to exploit our laws.”
The extradition order means Austrian authorities can seek his return to serve his prison sentence, with the appeal expected to challenge the ruling.
The case surfaced amid heightened scrutiny of Afghan asylum seekers in Britain, where debates over asylum decision-making have focused in part on identity, criminality checks and public protection.
Since October 2021, more than 35,000 Afghan nationals have claimed asylum in the UK, and an additional 37,000 have been granted permission to stay through the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (ARAP) or the Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme (ACRS).
Noori’s case coincided with another high-profile prosecution involving an Afghan asylum seeker, which has also drawn political attention to safeguarding and enforcement.
Ahmad Mulakhil, a 23-year-old Afghan asylum seeker, was found guilty in February 2026 at Warwick Crown Court of abducting, raping, and taking indecent videos of a 12-year-old girl in Nuneaton.
Both cases have fed a wider argument from ministers and officials that immigration and asylum systems must prevent fraud, detect false representation, and stop people with serious criminal histories from securing status through incomplete or inaccurate records.
For the Home Office, the Noori case has become a test of how quickly it can act when criminality emerges after an asylum decision, and whether appeals and extradition proceedings can proceed while the department reviews how his status was granted.
Home Office Grants Asylum to Afghan Migrant Convicted of Rape
Omar Ali Noori, an Afghan national, faces extradition from the UK to Austria following a prior rape conviction. Despite his criminal history and use of multiple false identities, he was granted permanent residency in the UK in 2023. The Home Office is now reviewing his status amid public outcry over screening failures. This case highlights growing concerns regarding the vetting of asylum seekers and the prevention of immigration fraud.
