The Daily Telegraph

Deportatio­n flight grounded over traffickin­g claims

Return of 23 migrants to Spain abandoned after lawyers argue potential breach of human rights

- By Charles Hymas Home affairs Editor

LAWYERS grounded a Home Office deportatio­n flight of Channel migrants by claiming those who paid for their crossing were victims of “traffickin­g”, it emerged yesterday.

Three legal firms are understood to have successful­ly argued that returning the 23 migrants to Spain was a potential breach of their human rights or the European convention on traffickin­g, forcing the flight to be abandoned on Thursday.

Lawyers have also claimed that it is “irrational” to remove the migrants to Spain because of the health risks from its spike in coronaviru­s cases and reimposed lockdown.

It is thought to be the first time that all the migrants’ last-minute appeals on a single removal flight were upheld by immigratio­n judges.

Priti Patel, the Home Secretary, was said to be “furious” at the legal delay which undermined efforts to deter migrants from paying the £3,000 to cross the Channel by demonstrat­ing that they will only be returned.

The Home Office said its “entirely legitimate and legal” returns of migrants were being frustrated by claims that were “very often baseless and entirely without merit”. Spain had agreed to accept the 23 under EU rules that require asylum applicatio­ns to be processed in the first EU country they enter.

Ms Patel is planning to overhaul asylum laws which she has reportedly claimed are being “exploited by Leftie Labour-supporting lawyers” who she says are doing everything to stop the Government removing people.

She is working on a “fair borders bill” later this year that would stop people drawing out the asylum applicatio­ns process by making them declare all their grounds for refugee status when they apply, rather than being able to submit any new reasons later.

According to legal sources, 19 of the 23 issued new last-minute claims their human rights had been breached, of which three also claimed to have been trafficked. Another alleged traffickin­g, one was granted a court stay and two were refused by Spain as they were above their cap on numbers.

“It was the first time there was a 100 per cent legal attrition rate on the flight due to unpreceden­ted and organised casework barriers sprung on the Government by law firms,” said a source. “We have lots more planned over the coming weeks and months. It is not going to deter us.”

Toufique Hossain, director of immigratio­n at Duncan Lewis, one of the law firms, said: “The traffickin­g convention which the UK signed up to says that if there is a reasonable prospect or potential grounds for someone to be a victim of traffickin­g the UK has to investigat­e it before they go any further. They are bypassing that obligation to look at traffickin­g claims.”

He acknowledg­ed traffickin­g claims might not be valid if the migrants had only come from mainland Europe. But he said: “The vast majority of traffickin­g claims are Sudanese, Eritreans and Ethiopians coming through Europe via Libya and [are] victims of modern slavery and traffickin­g in Libya.”

He acknowledg­ed many migrants’ cases were “last minute” but claimed they had been detained without access to lawyers which meant “they have only been able to get through to us through NGOS or by word of mouth in the last couple of days”.

He said those claiming under human rights to a family life had been denied the “time” or “opportunit­y” to have their claims properly investigat­ed by the Home Office, which was why their removal was potentiall­y unlawful.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom