Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Highest number of ‘voluntary returns’ from UK are Indians

END OF DREAMS Those coming back home feel they don’t have a future in the country

- Prasun Sonwalkar Prasun.Sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com

THOSE WITHOUT THE RIGHT TO REMAIN IN BRITAIN ARE UNABLE TO WORK, OPEN BANK ACCOUNTS, OBTAIN DRIVING LICENCES OR ACCESS OTHER SERVICES

LONDON: Thousands of Indian citizens who either entered the United Kingdom illegally or overstayed their visas over the years are returning home, reflecting difficult economic conditions here and the tight curbs that make it difficult for them to seek work and access civic services.

Britain has long been the destinatio­n of illegal migrants, who believe the streets of London are paved with gold but a hostile environmen­t in recent years for such people and rapidly changing conditions in countries such as India has reversed some routes.

For the first time, official figures for 2016 show the highest number of “voluntary returns” (of those not under police investigat­ion or in detention) was for Indian nationals: 5,365, or 22% of the total returns from the UK, marking a new point in the discourse.

“These are people who feel they don’t have a future here. It is the UK government’s humanitari­an gesture, to help those who want to return voluntaril­y, by providing them air fare and some assistance to resettle back home,” senior Labour Party MP Virendra Sharma told HT.

The MP for Ealing Southall, with a large population of Indian origin, added: “Their return is a reflection of a combinatio­n of factors. India is also progressin­g rapidly, they may feel that it is better to be back among family and friends.”

Those without the right to remain in Britain are unable to work, open bank accounts, obtain driving licences or access other services.

Recent curbs make it mandatory for landlords to check prospectiv­e tenants’ immigratio­n status.

“Conditions are bad here. They don’t get social security, can’t work. Rather than sit in poverty here, they prefer to return. Many such people have some land or other assets back home.

There have also been very few asylum seekers from India in the last 10 years,” said Jasdev Singh Rai, director of the Sikh Human Rights Forum.

The “voluntary returns” group is part of a larger group of illegal migrants, many of whom destroy their passports on reaching the UK, to make it difficult for authoritie­s to prove their nationalit­y and return them to their countries of origin.

The home office assesses that “Indian nationals are one of the top nationalit­ies remaining in the UK illegally”.

The issue of returning the illegals is central to India-UK talks over visas. As Prime Minister Theresa May said in New Delhi in November, “(The) UK will consider further improvemen­ts to our visa offer if at the same time we can step up the speed and volume of returns of Indians with no right to remain in the UK.”

The nationalit­y of the 5,365 voluntary returnees may not have been in question but the home office and Indian authoritie­s have been debating the complex issue of verifying the identity of many more whose Indian citizenshi­p needs to be establishe­d before they are sent home. A home office official told HT: “A major barrier for removal is the current process for obtaining travel documentat­ion for those without a current passport.

While we are grateful for the cooperatio­n of the Indian government, the current process which may involve checks in India at state level - can be quite lengthy and often relies on the cooperatio­n of the individual concerned.

“We are therefore seeking to expedite the process for those individual­s for whom we have indisputab­le evidence that they are Indian nationals from the passport which they submitted as part of their UK visa applicatio­n. “Since the UK-India Returns Memorandum of Understand­ing was not renewed by the previous Indian government in 2011, our cooperatio­n on returns has lacked a formal framework. The current process cannot deliver emergency travel documents in sufficient number or at sufficient speed.”

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