The Guardian Australia

Tory MPs call for immediate return of Albanian asylum seekers

- Peter Walker Political correspond­ent

More than 50 Conservati­ve MPs have written to Rishi Sunak saying asylum seekers from Albania should be summarily returned, as should those who say they have been trafficked, an idea condemned by charities as unworkable.

The MPs, led by the former cabinet minister David Davis, argue this would reduce asylum backlogs and provide a deterrent to migrants. But Amnesty Internatio­nal said the idea would breach the UN refugee convention and put vulnerable people at risk.

The letter urges Sunak to pass emergency legislatio­n, which would mean people from Albania or other countries seen as safe would be immediatel­y returned.

It says that this should also be the case for people who claim they have been trafficked or are a victim of modern slavery, arguing this is used by many Albanian arrivals to bolster their asylum case.

“If they have really been taken against their will, then they could not reasonably object to being returned to their own homes,” the letter says. “The quirks in our modern slavery laws that prevent this are clearly in defiance of the aims of that law and should be removed.” Davis told Sky News that Albania was “a safe country”, and that people should not be permitted to claim asylum over fears of persecutio­n from non-government actors such as criminal gangs.

“The Home Office itself has not been interpreti­ng the asylum laws correctly,” Davis said. “The point is to turn the turnaround time for an Albanian landing on our shores from years to days or weeks.

“That’s the aim and we think it’s possible. If we don’t do it the Home Office is never going to be able to cope with the number of applicatio­ns. It’s already 420 days to get a decision. It’d be longer and longer.”

He added: “I’m not scapegoati­ng the individual Albanians. What I want to do is to close those loopholes.”

Steve Valdez-Symonds, Amnesty UK’s refugee and migrant rights programme director, said Davis was wrong on several counts.

“There does seem to be quite a lot of nonsense here,” he said. “The starting point is whether your government is unwilling or unable to provide protec

tion from persecutio­n. It doesn’t set out who your persecutor­s have to be.

“It could be organised crime, or a blood feud. It can also be women who are persecuted by their own families. The question is whether the state is both able and willing to provide the protection­s that it is expected under internatio­nal law to provide.”

Just over 50% of Albanians were granted asylum in the UK, Valdez-Symonds said, adding that it was incorrect to say trafficked people could be returned home safely.

“Not every survivor of human traffickin­g is necessaril­y unsafe to be returned,” he said. “But returning someone to where they were trafficked from is likely to deliver them into cruel exploitati­on all over again, unless there is some significan­t improvemen­t to their circumstan­ces in that place.”

 ?? Photograph: Amer Ghazzal/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck ?? The MPs, led by the former cabinet minister David Davis, say the change would reduce asylum backlogs.
Photograph: Amer Ghazzal/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck The MPs, led by the former cabinet minister David Davis, say the change would reduce asylum backlogs.

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