Scottish Daily Mail

Surrender to migrants on human rights laws

‘There is nothing we can do’

- By Ian Drury Home Affairs Correspond­ent

BRITAIN is powerless to boot out thousands of illegal immigrants, a minister admitted last night.

In a stark indictment of the UK’s porous borders, Richard Harrington said many could not be deported because they had ‘no place to go’.

By refusing to disclose their nationalit­y – often burning their passports – they exploit human rights laws that bar the expulsion of asylum seekers of unknown origin.

Mr Harrington, who is a Home Office minister, spoke out after MPs criticised the Government for failing to send back illegals. ‘Where would they be deported to, most of them?’ he said.

‘This deportatio­n sounds easy, it sounds a common sense thing to do. But the truth is most of these illegal migrants have got no place to be deported to.’

Tory MPs said the UK had become a ‘soft touch’ and efforts to tackle illegal immigratio­n were at an ‘all-time low’.

Home Office data shows the number kicked out had almost halved from 21,425 in 2004 to only 12,056 last year.

The Conservati­ve revolt comes amid mounting anger at David Cameron’s failure to seize back control of Britain’s borders in his EU negotiatio­ns ahead of June’s referendum.

Christophe­r Chope, whose Private Member’s Bill would make it a criminal offence to be an illegal immigrant after June, insisted migrants were given a ‘perverse incentive’ to head to the UK. The Tory MP said they were given a ‘slap on the wrist’ by ‘soft touch’ officials.

‘Public anxiety about illegal immigratio­n is at an all-time high and the effectiven­ess of the Government in tackling it, in my submission, is at an all-time low,’ he added.

‘If we got tough with illegal migrants in our country then the people smugglers would divert them away from the United Kingdom because the way people smugglers operate is they are always going to try to use the weakest points of entry.’

Mr Harrington also blamed the Dublin Convention, an EU rule under which migrants are supposed to claim asylum in the first member state they set foot in, for the UK’s inability to de port illegal immigrants.

It is often difficult to establish exactly where an individual first arrived in the EU and, in 2014, Britain sent only 49 asylum seekers back to France – despite thousands making their way here via Calais. Migrants are also spared being sent back to homelands judged unsafe.

Challengin­g Mr Harrington on the convention, Sir Edward Leigh, a Tory Euroscepti­c, said: ‘What people can’t understand is where someone has palpably come through perfectly safe countries – Spain, France, Italy – and they’ve arrived here and they’re caught, why can’t they be sent back to France and claim asylum there?’

Figures yesterday showed that a record 1.25million asylum seekers arrived in the EU last year – more than double the figure from 2014.

The figures from Eurostat, the EU’s official statistica­l agency, showed that 38,400 lodged claims in the UK – a 19 per cent increase on the year before.

Campaigner­s and MPs warned the figures were the tip of the iceberg because they cover only official claims and do not take account of migrants who have not claimed asylum. Many do not immediatel­y seek sanctuary when they arrive in Europe – either waiting until they reach wealthy Northern Europe or working illegally in the black market.

Analysts estimate more than a million foreigners are living unlawfully in the UK.

A Home Office spokesman said: ‘We have legislated to make it harder for people to lodge spurious appeals and through the Immigratio­n Act 2014 we have made it easier to remove people who should not be in the UK through the introducti­on of “deport now, appeal later” provisions.

‘The Immigratio­n Bill, currently going through Parliament, will extend these provisions to apply to all human rights claims by migrants, except where removal pending appeal would be in breach of their human rights.’

‘Most have no place to be deported to’

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