A Somalian refugee, who continued receiving nearly £39,000 in benefits after returning to his homeland because he missed the sunshine, has been jailed for fifteen months.
Pensioner Mohamed Qoomaal, 72, had pension credit payments sent to him for two-and-a-half years and a mystery person enjoyed rent-free living in his council-funded home.
He even forged an immigration stamp on his British passport in a failed attempt to trick investigators into accepting he had been residing in the UK.
Mohamed Qoomaal, 72, (pictured centre) had pension credit payments sent to him for two-and-a-half years and a mystery person enjoyed rent-free living in his council-funded home
Qoomaal pleaded guilty to two counts of dishonestly failing to notify a change of circumstances regarding Pension Credit and Housing Benefit between August 20, 2013 and February 22, 2016.
Incredibly Qoomaal, of 70 Archery Close, Harrow continued to receive benefits, minus a £44 per-week deduction to compensate the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP).
At that rate it would have taken Qoomaal, who also burdens the NHS with heart and renal issues, seventeen years to repay the £38,869.97p total.
Despite arriving in this country fifteen years ago he also needed a taxpayer-funded interpreter during eight court hearings.
Incredibly Qoomaal, of 70 Archery Close, Harrow continued to receive benefits, minus a £44 per-week deduction to compensate the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP)
‘Why does he live here? Why is he entitled to benefits? What’s he doing here?’ asked Isleworth Crown Court Judge Jonathan Ferris.
‘He can’t have made much of a contribution to the pension credit he is receiving.’
‘He failed to notify the fact he was living abroad in Somalia and in order to mislead investigators he fabricated an immigration stamp in his passport,’ said prosecutor Miss Lisa Matthews.
The court heard Qoomaal wanted to live in a warmer climate for health benefits and only returned to the UK when he heard he was wanted for questioning.
‘He left the UK on an open ticket and did not return. He gave the keys to his privately-rented flat to a third party, who lived there while he was abroad,’ added the prosecutor.
When quizzed Qoomaal tried to lie his way out of trouble, but finally confessed when his legal representative informed him the evidence was overwhelming.
He currently receives a large quantity of free prescription medication and has a series of hospital appointments with departments specialising in cardiology, dialysis and infectious diseases.
‘He also has problems with his legs,’ said Qoomaal’s lawyer Miss Mariska Van Leeuwen. ‘He had a heart attack last year and another this year and he has a vast amount of medication with him.’
Qoomaal claimed asylum on the basis he was in danger in his homeland, but this did not prevent his return trip, where he received his benefit money via Western Union transfers from an accomplice.
‘He’s just gone back there, how does that work?’ asked Judge Ferris. ‘He came here as a refugee fifteen years ago and then goes back to Somalia to enjoy the nice weather.
‘Someone was living in his flat that the public purse paid for or it was rented out.
Qoomaal even forged an immigration stamp on his British passport in a failed attempt to trick investigators into accepting he had been residing in the UK.
‘I don’t see why a person who took nearly thirty-nine thousand pounds and went to another country and fabricated an immigration stamp on his passport should not go to prison immediately.
‘What ties does he have in this country apart from the benefits system.’
The judge told Qoomaal: ‘You came to this country as a refugee and enjoyed the benefits of this country as a British citizen, which you became.
‘With that comes certain responsibilities and certain consequences for someone who breaks the law as you have done.’
In a desperate attempt to avoid imprisonment Qoomaal applied to change his plea to not guilty, resulting in several more costly court hearings.
‘I was in the country, I was paying bills,’ he claimed. ‘I’m not lying. It’s not an illusion, it’s not a made-up story.
‘At the DWP the Somalian interpreter was not in my dialect. I did not understand and they were not saying what I was saying.
‘The lawyer pressured me to plead guilty and I did not understand ‘guilty’. I thought it was something that makes you free.’
Judge Ferris told him: ‘The offences are aggravated by your attempt to avoid responsibility by the false stamp on your British passport.
‘You have also made an elaborate and utterly hopeless application to change your plea, which has resulted in at least four additional court hearings.’
Despite arriving in the this country fifteen years ago, Qoomaal also needed a taxpayer-funded interpreter during eight court hearings