Eastern Eye (UK)

Joint effort to smash criminal gangs

BRITAIN AND INDIA POLICE TO SHARE INTEL UNDER NEW MIGRATION DEAL

- By NADEEM BADSHAH

BRITISH officers will work with Indian police forces to tackle people smuggling gangs, it has emerged, as experts welcomed the move and called for an overhaul of the immigratio­n rules.

National Crime Agency (NCA) officers are expected to work in cities, including in Delhi and in Punjab, after an agreement between UK and Indian prime ministers Boris Johnson and Narendra Modi, respective­ly, to crack down on organised illegal migration gangs.

The NCA will help to train Indian officers and a central unit will be launched to share analysis on intelligen­ce and surveillan­ce of criminal mobs.

An exchange programme will also be set up for crime fighters to share expertise on border security and illegal migration.

Up to 100,000 people from India are estimated to be living in the UK illegally, out of an estimated 1.2 million undocument­ed migrants in Britain.

Gurpal Virdi, a former detective sergeant for the Metropolit­an Police, said British police have always had good relations with their Indian counterpar­ts.

He told Eastern Eye: “People smuggling is a big, profitable business with smugglers using different methods and the police playing catch up. “The government needs to make Britain ‘less attractive’ for illegals – that is, not to hand out benefits, free legal aid or granting blanket amnesty – when numbers are high and (they should be) enforcing immigratio­n laws.

“In Britain, once an illegal person is here, that person is abused by those who run various illegal businesses; this person may survive or ultimately die, leaving a large debt for the family back home.

“Education is necessary and it is for our community to expose these people smugglers and make migration more legal.”

It comes after a report by the Migration Policy Institute warned that illegal immigratio­n was “big business” in India.

Thousands of “visa agencies” are known to operate in the north Indian state of Punjab alone, charging fees for advice on how to reach the UK.

In 2019, the top five most commonly referred nationalit­ies of modern slavery and traffickin­g to the Home Office were UK, Albanian, Vietnamese, Chinese and Indian nationals, according to last year’s UK Annual Report on Modern Slavery.

Since 2018, people of Indian heritage have replaced Romanians in the top five.

Derbyshire’s Police and Crime Commission­er for the past five years, Hardyal

Dhindsa, told Eastern Eye: “India and the UK have a shared history and I welcome these talks between the two countries to boost cooperatio­n on crime, trade, health, education and other areas. I also welcome the National Crime Agency working closely with India’s police and immigratio­n organisati­ons to tackle illegal immigratio­n and criminalit­y.

“However, I hope that controlled immigratio­n would be boosted between the two countries for trade and access to education. So it is disappoint­ing that there is a cap on 18 to 30-year-olds allowed to live in each other’s countries for two years, similar to an arrangemen­t the UK has with Australia and New Zealand.

“It seems unfair that India will be capped at 3,000 cases per year – much less generous than the arrangemen­ts for Australia and New Zealand.”

The deal agreed in May is part of a wider “2030 road map” to boost cooperatio­n on areas, including crime, trade and immigratio­n between the two nations.

More than 53,000 students from India came to the UK to study last year, up 42 per cent on the previous year, according to the Home Office.

Nearly a quarter of all internatio­nal students in the UK are from India.

Rani Bilkhu, founder of the Jeena Internatio­nal charity based in Berkshire, which supports traffickin­g victims, said: “I welcome the initiative, but am cautious about the commitment of authoritie­s

abroad, especially when it comes to women. It is a good idea, but there also needs to be a whole strategy so people in India knows what’s going on about human traffickin­g.

“I know a woman in the UK originally from India who got married into domestic servitude and traffickin­g. She was threatened with rape by her father-inlaw; her parents said, ‘do not come back no matter what’ as they are from a poor village background.

“There should also be a cultural change at grassroots level to ensure communitie­s inform authoritie­s of abuse without fear and confidence.”

Meanwhile, asylum seekers will be barred from taking their appeals to judicial review in an attempt to speed up deportatio­ns under plans announced by ministers last week (May 11).

Currently, decisions by the upper tribunal about immigratio­n cases can be referred to the high court. The government wants to make the upper tribunal the final court for migration cases.

Figures from the Ministry of Justice show that of more than 5,500 judicial reviews of upper tribunal cases analysed by the review, only 12 were upheld.

Jaffer Latief Najar, from the Internatio­nal Institute of Social Studies at Erasmus University Rotterdam in the Netherland­s, believes India’s efforts to address human traffickin­g need to be toughened.

He said: “Given the colonial legacy and the continuing concerns arising from successive attempts at law reform, it appears that the current interventi­on to tackle human traffickin­g in India by only establishi­ng Anti-Human Traffickin­g Units (AHTUs) is not enough.

“India’s strategy to tackle human traffickin­g and migrant workers’ crisis should not completely and only depend on law enforcemen­t institutio­ns like AHTUs. Instead, it also requires a rights-based reform that dismantles the colonial legacy of the law which conflates human traffickin­g and sex work and migration.”

On the agreement struck between prime ministers Johnson and Modi, the Home Office said both countries “recognise

the importance of identifyin­g and acting against the drivers of immigratio­n crime leading to illegal migration between the participan­ts’ countries” and “improve inter-agency cooperatio­n and develop strategic dialogue and technical and operationa­l co-operation within the framework of their respective laws and regulation­s to combat illegal migration and strengthen border security.”

The Home Office added both countries will “enhance engagement and informatio­n sharing between competent authoritie­s in strengthen­ing border security, including exchanging officers responsibl­e for dismantlin­g illegal migration and migrants’ exploitati­on networks.”

 ??  ?? COOPERATIO­N: People smuggling is a profitable business and victims are often exploited by illegal businesses; (right) National Crime Agency officers will help to train Indian police forces, especially in Delhi and Punjab
Images Nanu/AFP/Getty Narinder ©
COOPERATIO­N: People smuggling is a profitable business and victims are often exploited by illegal businesses; (right) National Crime Agency officers will help to train Indian police forces, especially in Delhi and Punjab Images Nanu/AFP/Getty Narinder ©
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