It is alleged Saki stabbed Minyurano,an acquaintance,at Acacia Ridge about 12.10am on Sunday,May 12.
Nine News has confirmed Saki was released from immigration detention after AAT deputy president Stephen Boyle overturned a 2019 decision to strip the Sudanese-born man of his humanitarian visa on character grounds. He had been detained at Yongah Hill Immigration Detention Centre in regional Western Australia until his release in early April.
The revelation poses a fresh headache for the Albanese government,which has been under fire since theHigh Court ruled that indefinite immigration detention was unlawful. The November 2023 decision led to the release of more than 150 detainees,many with serious criminal convictions,into the community.
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Born in Khartoum in December 1994,Saki was 11 when he was resettled in Australia along with his father and siblings from Egypt in October 2006 after being granted global special humanitarian visas. But Saki’s visa was cancelled in October 2019 due to his failing the character test.
According to the AAT,he was in breach of the character test “by reason of having a ‘substantial criminal record’ because he had been sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 12 months or more”.
The AAT heard Saki had a history of offending dating back to 2011,in NSW,the ACT,Queensland and South Australia.