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Daily London > World Affairs > Met Police searching for another mistakenly released foreign prisoner
World Affairs

Met Police searching for another mistakenly released foreign prisoner

Daily London
By Daily London
Published: November 5, 2025
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Daily London

For the second time in two weeks, London police are searching for a foreign prisoner accidentally released from custody.

The Metropolitan Police confirmed at lunchtime on Wednesday (Wednesday night AEDT) that a 24-year-old Algerian man was released from His Majesty’s Prison Wandsworth, in south-west London, on October 29.

The Met said the Prison Service informed police of the release just after 1pm on Tuesday.

A 24-year-old Algerian man was released from His Majesty’s Prison Wandsworth, in south-west London, on October 29. (AP/File photo)

“Officers are carrying out urgent enquiries in an effort to locate him and return him to custody,” they said.

The Met Police did not name the Algerian man or say what crime he had been charged with or convicted of.

It followed the case of convicted sex offender and asylum seeker Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu, whose release from a prison in Chelmsford, Essex, embarrassed the government last month.

The confirmation from the Met came minutes after Secretary of State for Justice David Lammy had repeatedly refused to assure the parliament there had been no more accidental releases since then.

As Deputy Prime Minister, Lammy was taking Prime Minister’s Questions in the absence of Labour leader Keir Starmer.

A spokesperson for Starmer later told UK media the latest release was “unacceptable” and would be “forensically” looked at.

Opposition defence spokesperson James Cartlidge asked Lammy five times to reassure the house that “no other asylum seeking offender has been accidentally let out of prison”.

Deputy Prime Minister, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice David Lammy arrives to attend a weekly cabinet meeting at Downing Street on October 28, 2025, in London, England. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

He refused, instead attacking the Tories over the state the prisons system was in when Labour came into office in July 2024 and pointing to an ongoing review of the mistaken releases being undertaken by Dame Lynne Owens.

“Get a grip man,” Lammy shouted over the roar of the boisterous chamber.

“I know I’m the Justice Secretary. That’s why I’m at the dispatch box also as deputy prime minister.

” … Dame Anne Owens is a former deputy commissioner in London, head of the NCA [National Crime Agency], it is for her to get to the bottom of that work.”

Shadow Defence Secretary James Cartlidge speaks on stage on day three of the Conservative party conference at Manchester Central Convention Complex on October 7, 2025. (Photo by Ian Forsyth/Getty Images)

That review is due to be completed before Christmas. Starmer’s spokesperson reportedly said the Algerian’s release would likely form part of the review but refused to say whether Lammy knew about it during PMQs.

UK government data released in July showed 262 prisoners were released in error in the year to March 2025, up 128 per cent from the previous year. 

The Prison Service also launched an investigation into Kebatu’s mistaken release, and a prison officer was removed from duties while it’s completed. 

Government officials described the mistake at the time as an “egregious failure”.

Kebatu had already made national headlines even before he was released in error. His arrest earlier this year over the sexual assault of a teenage girl triggered a wave of angry anti-migrant protests in London and other cities.

He was sentenced to 12 months in prison for five offences, including the sexual assault of a 14-year-old on the outskirts of London in July a little more than a week after arriving in England by boat.

It sparked protests at the Bell Hotel in Epping, where he was staying along with other newly arrived migrants, as well as other hotels housing migrants across the country. Stand Up to Racism also rallied in counterprotests.

The opposition and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage have forced the issue of unauthorised migration – especially the tens of thousands of migrants crossing the English Channel in overloaded boats to reach the UK – to the top of the political agenda and harshly criticised the government for housing migrants in hotels.

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