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UN human rights office rebukes Sweden for deporting disabled child twice to Albania

News RoomBy News RoomApril 27, 2026
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In a ruling that underscores the profound ethical responsibilities nations hold toward vulnerable individuals within their borders, the United Nations Human Rights Committee declared on Monday that Sweden had violated the fundamental rights of a young man with severe disabilities. The case centers on E.B., an Albanian citizen now aged 21, who suffers from a complex constellation of medical conditions: autism, a grave mental developmental disorder, spastic diplegic cerebral palsy, hydrocephalus, and epilepsy. This finding, published on April 27, 2026, reveals a tragic narrative of a child seeking sanctuary and care, only to face repeated deportation by a state that failed to uphold its international human rights obligations.

The story began in 2012 when E.B. and his family arrived in Sweden, seeking both protection and the advanced medical treatment crucial for his survival. For years, they navigated a labyrinth of unsuccessful asylum applications and appeals. Despite the clear and severe nature of E.B.’s health needs, Swedish authorities ultimately deported the family to Albania in 2016, when the boy was just ten years old. The situation in Albania proved dire, lacking the essential healthcare infrastructure and medications required to manage his life-threatening conditions. Driven by desperation to preserve their child’s life, the family quickly returned to Sweden without legal status to ensure he received treatment. This act of parental devotion, however, was met not with compassion but with renewed legal rejection. Their repeated applications for residency permits were denied, leading to a second expulsion in 2019, when E.B. was fourteen years old, further compounding the trauma and risk.

In its decisive statement, the Committee, through Vice Chair Wafaa Bassim, articulated a critical principle for all nations. Bassim emphasized that before deporting a child with severe and complex disabilities, states must conduct a rigorous, individualized assessment. They must proactively ensure that essential treatment and medication will be genuinely accessible and available in the receiving country. The Committee’s formal decision, dated March 30, elaborated on this duty, stating that countries must not remove a person from their territory when there are “substantial grounds for believing that there was a real risk of irreparable harm” in the destination country. In E.B.’s case, the Swedish authorities failed to undertake this vital verification process before both deportations.

Consequently, the Committee found that Sweden, by not confirming E.B.’s access to essential medication and care in Albania, had exposed him to a real and foreseeable risk of irreparable harm. This failure constituted a violation of two core rights under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: his right to life, and his right to be free from torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment. The committee’s language frames the deportations not merely as administrative missteps, but as actions that threatened E.B.’s very existence and inflicted profound suffering on a deeply vulnerable individual. E.B. himself communicated to the committee that he had returned to Sweden once more, but remains under the shadow of a new removal order, living in a state of perpetual uncertainty and fear.

As a result of its findings, the Committee has called upon Sweden to take specific remedial actions. It asked Stockholm to thoroughly review E.B.’s pending applications for asylum or residence permits with a fresh, rights-compliant perspective. Furthermore, it stated that Sweden must provide him with adequate compensation for the harms he has endured. The UN Human Rights Committee, composed of 18 independent experts, monitors global adherence to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. While it possesses no direct legal power to compel states to follow its rulings, its decisions carry significant moral and reputational weight, serving as authoritative interpretations of international law and benchmarks for state conduct.

This case stands as a stark reminder to all nations of the human cost embedded within migration and asylum policies. It transcends legal technicalities, highlighting the imperative to center humanity—especially the most vulnerable—in all administrative decisions. The story of E.B. is not just about one young man and one country; it is a parable about the duty of care owed by any state to individuals whose lives depend on its compassion and procedural rigor. For E.B., the committee’s ruling represents a long-awaited validation of his suffering and a plea for justice. For the world, it is a crucial affirmation that the right to life is inseparable from the responsibility to protect it, particularly when the threat comes from a state’s own actions.

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