Daily Mail

Law ‘must change to stop migrants gaming the system’

- By David Churchill Chief Political Correspond­ent

ANTI-SLAVERY laws could be amended to stop asylum seekers from ‘gaming the system’.

The move is recommende­d in a report to be released today. In its foreword, Home Secretary Suella Braverman says Britons are ‘fed up with the continued flouting’ and ‘abuse’ of immigratio­n rules.

The proposal is to amend the Modern Slavery Act 2015, which was passed to combat traffickin­g but is suspected of being abused.

The number of asylum seekers falsely claiming to be victims of traffickin­g to avoid being removed is suspected of fuelling a dramatic rise in claims since the legislatio­n was introduced. Albanians, in particular, are thought to be using the ruse.

Referrals to the National Referral Mechanism (NRM) – the system for identifyin­g potential slavery victims – have skyrockete­d in recent years.

In the first three months of this year, the three main agencies concerned with immigratio­n and border control accounted for 45 per cent (1,695) of referrals, up from 33 per cent during the same period in 2019.

Options being considered are tightening the criteria for which claims can be lodged, raising the evidential threshold and barring whole nationalit­ies from making claims where there is clear evidence of widespread abuse. Immigratio­n minister Robert Jenrick said over the weekend that Albanians should be barred from claiming asylum, adding: ‘The principle that we come from is that a safe country like Albania should be excluded from the right to claim asylum.’

Other tougher rules being considered include banning asylum seekers who arrive via illegal routes, such as on cross- Channel small boats, from ever settling here.

Rishi Sunak is battling to convince voters that the Tories can tackle the small-boats crisis and wants to ensure those who arrive via illegal routes are barred from securing permanent residence. The PM is in talks with Mrs Braverman about tougher new legislatio­n, but it is unlikely to be introduced until next year.

The report by the Centre for Policy Studies think-tank said: ‘Modern slavery legislatio­n has become the first line of defence for many illegal immigrants, with the european Convention on Human Rights as their fallback position.’

In the foreward, Mrs Braverman writes: ‘The British public are fair-minded, tolerant, and generous in spirit. But we are fed up with the continued flouting of our laws and immigratio­n rules to game our asylum system.

‘We’ve had enough of the persistent abuse of human rights laws to thwart the removal of those with no right to be in the UK. This must end.

‘I know that to deliver the Rwanda partnershi­p at scale, to disrupt the organised gangs who facilitate these illegal journeys, to remove the incentive for people to illegally cross the Channel, and to ensure we have an asylum framework that is fit for purpose, requires further work.

‘The Prime Minister and I are committed to doing whatever it takes. We will deliver the operationa­l and legislativ­e changes necessary to comprehens­ively tackle this problem.’

Around 44,000 people have arrived on small boats this year, and figures last month showed the net immigratio­n in the year to June was 504,000.

Pollsters YouGov found that 84 per cent of voters think the Government is handling immigratio­n badly.

‘The public are fed up’

thE mail is pleased to hear that rishi sunak is taking ‘ personal charge’ of plans to curb illegal migration, but he must forgive us for also feeling a distinct sense of deja vu.

Every Pm and home secretary since 2010 has promised to get a grip on immigratio­n. None has made a discernibl­e difference.

more than 40,000 asylum seekers coming across the Channel and total net migration up to a staggering half a million in the year to June represent a colossal failure of both policy and will.

to be fair to mr sunak, he is new to the job and has already signed an enhanced bilateral deal with France to disrupt the boats and the people trafficker­s who launch them. We await results.

there are also plans to restrict the right to remain for illegal entrants and to disqualify all albanians from being granted asylum on the grounds that they come from a safe country.

these are sensible measures. But they must be part of a wider strategy to control our borders. and it must be seen to work.

migration is where Labour is at its weakest. the party’s open borders policy and tony Blair’s human rights act were the root cause of the problems we see today.

if mr sunak can provide the solution, he may yet win the next election.

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