Daily Mail

Passport e-gates ‘ helping people smugglers get children to UK’

- By Ian Drury Home Affairs Editor

‘Victims of modern slavery’

ELECTRONIC passport gates at airports could be hampering the fight against people smuggling, a watchdog has warned.

David Bolt, the chief inspector of borders and immigratio­n, said trafficker­s could be using self-service e-gates to smuggle children and modern slavery victims undetected into Britain.

He said there were not enough staff to monitor the gates and spot ‘vulnerable’ people arriving in the country, adding that ministers should have a ‘better idea’ of how many illegal migrants were in the UK.

And he warned that Home Office staff would have to process about 100 applicatio­ns a day if they are to meet the demand from EU citizens wanting to stay in Britain after Brexit. Mr Bolt told MPs on the Commons’ home affairs select committee that the lack of Border Force staff monitoring e-gates could undermine the battle to crackdown on human traffickin­g.

Since March last year, the Home Office has been running a scheme which allows children as young as 12 to use the gates, which automatica­lly scan passports and compare them with biometric features of the traveller’s face. Previously, travellers had to be at least 18 to use the e-gates.

The move prompted fears that children and other vulnerable people travelling under duress – to be sold into prostituti­on or domestic servitude – could be missed because they are not seen at close quarters or spoken to by officials. Some smuggled children have relied on border staff seeing handwritte­n ‘help’ notes they have slipped into passports to save them.

Mr Bolt said: ‘The issue is whether the e-gates are dealing sufficient­ly with those more vulnerable arrivals, particular­ly the safeguardi­ng aspects around children and maybe victims of modern slavery, who might be going through those gates and whether the level of coverage of those gates is sufficient to give assurance that those risks are being managed.’

He also hit out at the Home Office’s failure to estimate how many illegal immigrants are in the UK, adding that although it would be ‘extremely difficult’ to be precise over the number, ministers should be given an estimate.

Mr Bolt’s interventi­on came after Home Secretary Amber Rudd told the committee last month that her department did not have a figure for the number of people in the country unlawfully.

Earlier this year the former director general of immigratio­n enforcemen­t at the Home Office said the figure was likely to run to more than a million. In an estimate 12 years ago, the Home Office put the total unauthoris­ed migrant population in 2001 at 430,000. In 2009, the London School of Economics said the figure was between 373,000 and 719,000.

The Home Office has recruited an extra 700 staff to deal with European immigratio­n casework and said it would hire a further 500 staff to start registerin­g 3 million EU nationals in the UK by next April.

Mr Bolt said the staff would each have to deal with about 100 applicatio­ns a day – one every five minutes. He told MPs that caseworker­s would ‘feel the pressure’ and there was an ‘optimism bias’ in many of the Home Office’s plans.

Mr Bolt’s comments came after a border workers’ union boss claimed illegal immigrants in Britain had little chance of being caught. Lucy Moreton, general secretary of the Immigratio­n Service Union, said: ‘If you are here illegally, you can survive very well, you access medical services, your child can go to school... the chances of us catching you are very, very slim.’

 ??  ?? Warning: A passport e-gate
Warning: A passport e-gate

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