“Daily Mail” for Albanian from Berat: How did he return to Britain after his deportation?

The British Tabloide “Daily Mail” has dedicated a long article to an Albanian murder convict, Edmond Kalmi. “An Albanian bandit who threatened to shoot a driver during a drug trafficking debate was an illegal immigrant who was extradited earlier by the United Kingdom for a murder of [...]
“An Albanian bandit who threatened to shoot a driver during a drug trafficking debate was an illegal immigrant who had been extradited earlier by the United Kingdom for a terrible murder in his hometown” writes “Daily Mail” for the 50-year-old man from Berat, convicted of murder in our country.
Part of the investigation:
Edmond Calmi, 50, pointed a copyable firearm at a woman on a street in the small mining town of Ferndale before he said: “What if we shoot you, you idiot?
He was imprisoned for 18 months for the incident in October 2022, while at his 2023 trial hearing, he was told that there was no permission to stay in the United Kingdom.
But the complete reality is even more shocking, with the first court documents from the State Ministry discovering that Kalmi was a repeat violent offender who was previously convicted of murder in Albania.
In 1998, he and another man broke into a family home and shot a woman in her arms for one year. Calmi and his friend had been in a fight at a bar with the victim's mate, the target.
The killer fled to Britain after the incident, where he was sentenced in 2007 for a stab wound.
After being extradited to Albania and serving the murder sentence, he was able to enter the United Kingdom for the second time and settle with his wife and daughter.
Activists today said that the way such an unpleasant and brutal neurox0> wrongdoer managed to stay illegally in Britain to pursue his criminal life not once but twice, offered the perfect research “of the miserable state of our borders.
The extradition procedure in 2008 was heard that Calmi had sought asylum in the United Kingdom using false information under the name Martin Buzi. Court records indicate that Calmi fled to Britain one day after the shooting on September 12, 1998. Two years later, he was convicted in absentia and sentenced to 12 years in prison.
Kalmmi continued his life in the United Kingdom, and in March 2007 he was sentenced to two years in prison at the Court of the Crown in Harrow after being convicted of deliberate injuries and clashes.
The extradition proceedings that were delayed by the trial began again while he was in prison, and in March 2008 a judge at the Westminster Magic Court gave the go-ahead for Calmi to be sent back to Albania for a retrial.
The killer appealed for several reasons, including Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which advocates the right to a family life, but it was overturned by the Supreme Court and it was finally extradited in July 2009.
In November 2012, after his retrial in Albania, three judges approved a decision supporting his murder sentence.
The retrial was heard that Kalmi had drunk at a bar in the village of Perondi in Albania with his friend Dritan Vila when they argued with a man named Hamit Baci and started beating each other with bottles of beer.
Baci got out of the bar and went home. Later, gunshots were heard near the house, and his wife, Ariana Bac, was found dead on the floor near her year - old son, who had previously been held in her arms.
Her husband was also at home with his mother - in - law, but both were saved.
One witness said they saw Kalmin and Willa armed with Kalashnikov. They later fled across the border with Greece before Kalmi smuggled into the United Kingdom.
Despite receiving a new eight-year prison sentence that began in 2009 when it was extradited, Kalmi appears to have been released from prison just six months after serving his sentence.
The Albanian entered Britain illegally for the second time and settled with his British wife and daughter at Pontywardd in Rhondda.
On October 21, 2022, he was driving through the town of Ferndal when he left a side street in front of a woman driver whose mother was in the passenger seat.
A row followed that ended with Kalmi's threat to the driver with a false weapon before she left by car.
In his subsequent trial, the Court of the Crown Merttullus Tydfil heard that the victim had remained “shaken and scared” from the incident.
The police were summoned, but Calmi had managed to hide or destroy the weapon. This weapon has never been found, although officers found tanks of gas and kindreds with spheres.
Kalm was found guilty of possession of a mock fire, with the intent to cause fear of violence.
Delivering the sentence, director Duncan Bould said: “This was an extremely threatening gesture reinforced by the production of a firearm with realistic images in order for [the victim] to believe illegal violence to be used against it, that it would be shot closely. ”
This convinced your victim and others that it was a real weapon. You kept that thing with you, predicting you could use it. You claimed that you used a mobile phone, but you didn't explain this explanation any more clearly, and the jury dismissed”, he added.
Kalm was sentenced to 18 months in prison in October 2023 before being released at the immigration evacuation centre in Colnbrook in December.
Robert Bates, director of Research at the Centre for Migration Control, said: “This man is a threat whose presence in Britain is extremely undesirable. ”
The fact that he was expelled from our country but was able to enter again by force is the perfect study case of how turbulent our borders are.
Politicians are disappointing the public by allowing the most unpleasant and brutal in the world to treat our streets as a playground for themselves.
The Interior Ministry refused to say whether he would be deported and when.












