Mr Ó hAnnaidh, who performs under the name Mo Chara, is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Wednesday 18 June.
There was also a large drop in the number of dependents accompanying people arriving in the UK on work and study visas, the ONS said.The previous biggest calendar year fall was during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, when net migration dropped from 184,000 in the year ending December 2019 to 93,000 in December 2020.
The large drop in the number of students bringing family members to the UK was a key objective of James Cleverly, the last Tory home secretary.At the same time, the end of global travel restrictions caused by the pandemic meant people who delayed their intention to move away finally went through with their plans.That group included people who came to the UK to study and have now left.
Cleverly said he was "very proud" to have played a part in reducing net migration.Talking to BBC Radio 4's World at One programme, he said it was something he worked on with the full support of then prime minister Rishi Sunak.
"It was roundly criticised by the Labour party at the time , who are now trying to take credit for the work that I and other Conservatives did when in government," he said.
Separate data released on Thursday by the Home Office showed the number of asylum seekers being housed in hotels has fallen - but is still higher than when Labour came to power last year.While much of the debunked footage has purported to show the immediate aftermath of the Indian strikes, some clips analysed by BBC Verify appeared to be trying to portray the Pakistani response as being more severe than it actually was.
One video, which has racked up almost 600,000 views on X, claimed to show that the "Pakistan army blew up the Indian Brigade headquarters". The clip, which shows blasts in the darkness, is actually from an unrelated video circulating on YouTube as early as last month.Elsewhere, one set of photos purported to show an operation carried out by the Pakistan Air Force targeting "Indian forward air-bases in the early hours of 6 May 2025". The images - which appeared to be captured by a drone - were actually screengrabs taken from the video game Battlefield 3.
The Pakistani military says it destroyed five jets on Wednesday morning local time. That announcement has led to some users sharing unrelated clips which they claimed showed the wreckage of Indian fighter jets. Some of these videos have obtained millions of views.But two widely shared images actually showed previous Indian air force jet crashes - one from an incident in Rajasthan in 2024 and another in the Punjab state in 2021. Both crashes were widely reported.