African refugees and migrants, mostly from Sudan and Senegal, look at the sea aboard Golfo Azurro, the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms rescue ship, after being rescued from a boat out of control at 25 miles north of Sabratha, off the Libyan coast, Feb. 23, 2016. (AP Photo)

UK’s ‘ground-breaking’ asylum bill to tackle irregular migration

U.K. follows a strict policy to minimize irregular migration toward its borders. For this, it tries to alleviate the burden of combating irregular migration by making legal arrangements within itself and signing agreements with other countries. Based on these, it can be said that the U.K. will continue to make new and concrete decisions against irregular migration in the upcoming period.

Considered a country of immigration, the United Kingdom has drawn attention with its strict policy to prevent irregular migration in recent years. In line with this goal, two significant developments took place recently.

The first is the Illegal Immigration Bill, or “ground-breaking Stop the Boats Bill” as stated on gov.uk, the public sector information website. Briefly, the bill makes impossible for asylum applications for those who illegally entered the country. It is noteworthy that according to the data shared by the Ministry of Interior, while 299 irregular migrants crossed the English Channel unlawfully and reached the U.K. in 2018, this number increased to 1,843 in 2019, 8,466 in 2020, 28,526 in 2021 and 45,755 last year. Thus, the number of irregular migrants arriving in the U.K. via the Channel has doubled in the last year.

Looking at the bill closely that the government submitted to Parliament on March 7, it is seen that five articles come to the fore. The first is that those who enter the U.K. illegally will be denied the right to seek asylum. The second is to prevent those entering the country illegally from being released on bail in the first 28 days of detention and requesting a judicial review. The third is to place a quota on the number of refugees to settle in the country legally, which will be determined by Parliament every year as a result of consultations with local authorities. The fifth is to ban the deported people from returning to the country and acquiring British citizenship.

The last is that with the authorization to be given to the minister of interior, those who enter the country illegally will be sent to their own country if it is safe or to one of the 57 countries designated as a safe third country if it is not.

It should not be forgotten that the U.K. signed an agreement with the Rwanda government last year so that some immigrants who entered the country illegally will be “hosted” until their asylum applications are finalized. Under the agreement, the U.K. will send immigrants it does not want to keep within its borders to Rwanda, and in return, it will provide development assistance to this country.

Likewise, the U.K. signed readmission agreements with Albania, Serbia and Pakistan in the last three years, accelerating the return processes of people who entered the country illegally from these countries. Therefore, it is necessary to see the U.K.’s last moves to prevent irregular migration as pieces of a puzzle.

As a justification for this bill, the Rishi Sunak government cites that people who illegally cross the English Channel do not escape directly from a war-ridden country, from persecution or life-threatening dangers, and cross over to the U.K. via safe European countries. While the second argument is plausible, the basis of the first is highly controversial because almost all immigrants who took refuge in the U.K. are citizens of insecure countries.

For example, according to the data of the Ministry of Interior, it is seen that the citizens of Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Eritrea are at the forefront among asylum-seekers from the U.K. last year. Therefore, the Illegal Immigration Bill, which aims to prevent asylum applications of irregular immigrants, does not comply with the article of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, to which the U.K. is a party, “Everyone has the right to seek and benefit from the opportunity of asylum in other countries in the face of persecution.” In addition, these steps taken by the U.K. as a part of the securitization of migration under the pretext of protecting its national security carry risks that may aggravate anti-immigrant sentiments and normalize anti-immigration practices in the country.

U.K.-France agreement

On the other hand, the Sunak government took another vital action recently and signed an agreement with France for the joint fight against irregular migration. According to the agreement signed during Sunak’s visit to Paris, the U.K. will provide financial support of approximately 550 million euros ($597 million) to France by 2026 to prevent small migrant boats from leaving France and crossing the Channel to its borders.

In response, France will open a new detention center for irregular migrants and set up a new team to prevent illegal crossings from the Channel, especially in Calais bays. In addition, the British and French security forces will patrol together on the coasts of France facing the U.K.

With this agreement, the Conservatives led by Sunak remove the issue of irregular migration from the agenda until the next general election, which is scheduled to be held no later than January 2025. Since the agreement covers one year after the election and the number of irregular immigrants trying to cross from France to the U.K. will probably decrease, the opposition’s claims of “you are not fighting immigration” against the government will be meaningless. For this reason, the Sunak government took precautions against criticism by making a three-year agreement with France, considering the election process.

It should be noted here as an essential point that the city of Calais in the north of France is among the frequent destinations of irregular migrants, as it is approximately 40 kilometers (25 miles) away from the town of Dover, a city in the south of Britain. For this reason, the U.K. has been making great efforts to prevent irregular migration from Calais since the David Cameron era. The walling of Calais’s coastline in 2016 is one of the first outputs of these efforts. Following the wall project, all expenses of which were covered by the U.K., there was a noticeable decrease in the number of irregular immigrants reaching the U.K. via the Channel. However, as France found the U.K.’s financial aid insufficient and therefore loosened its border control, the number of irregular migrants entering the U.K. began to increase again. That is why Premier Sunak convinced Paris to cooperate again, committing to further financial support.

All in all, it is understood that the U.K. follows a strict policy to minimize irregular migration toward its borders. For this, it tries to alleviate the burden of combating irregular migration by making legal arrangements within itself and signing agreements with other countries. Based on these, it can be said that the U.K. will continue to make new and concrete decisions against irregular migration in the upcoming period.

[Daily Sabah, March 30 2023]

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