The UK Home Office has issued a formal apology and agreed to pay £225,000 in compensation to British-Bangladeshi community leader Chowdhury Mueen Uddin after a prolonged defamation case. The dispute stemmed from a 2019 report on the Home Office website linking Mueen Uddin to extremism and referencing a controversial 1971 war crimes verdict from Bangladesh’s International Crimes Tribunal. Mueen Uddin denied all allegations, calling them politically motivated. In June 2024, the UK Supreme Court ruled unanimously in his favor, describing the government’s accusations as exceptionally serious and unfounded. Following the ruling, the Home Office publicly apologized in the Royal Courts of Justice and confirmed the compensation payment. Legal experts noted that this is among the largest defamation settlements ever paid by a UK government department. Mueen Uddin expressed relief and gratitude, saying the outcome reaffirmed the enduring power of truth and justice within Britain’s legal system.