Just nine passengers detained at Heathrow during
Border Force strike
Figure compares with 189 during same three days of
2021, but detentions at Manchester airport rose slightly
Rajeev Syal
Sat 31 Dec
2022 07.00 GMT
The number
of passengers detained for further checks at the UK’s busiest airport plummeted
in the run-up to Christmas after the armed services were asked to cover for
striking Border Force staff, leaked figures show.
Just nine
people were stopped at passport control and held at Heathrow over three strike
days from 23 to 25 December, compared with 189 people over the same three days
in 2021 – a 95% drop.
The data
covers people initially stopped using IS81 forms and then detained for further
checks. The figures include people seeking asylum.
In
contrast, at Manchester airport, 27 passengers were stopped using the same
powers over the same three-day period this year, a slight increase on the 21
stopped over the same days last year. Nearly all of the 27 stopped this year
were asylum seekers, sources said.
The figures
have been leaked to the Guardian amid a growing row over the role of members of
the armed services policing UK borders as members of the PCS union strike over
pay and conditions.
Ministers
have denied claims that the UK’s borders were less secure when staffed by
members of the armed forces, after the Guardian disclosed that substitute staff
received just five days of training and do not have the powers to detain those
they suspect of criminal activity.
Ben
Wallace, the defence secretary, said on a visit to Manchester airport on
Thursday: “The claim is just pure propaganda put out by the unions. That’s not
the case. I witnessed it today. And I am the former security minister, so I
know exactly how the borders work.”
But the PCS
general secretary, Mark Serwotka, said on Friday that the figures showed
otherwise.
“Ben
Wallace yesterday accused us of propaganda when we warned passengers were being
waved through passport control because the military wasn’t stopping them. These
figures prove we were telling the truth,” he said.
“For a
government that obsesses about security, that just 5% of the usual stops were
carried out raises serious concerns about our borders. The military is no
substitute for highly trained, experienced Border Force professionals who are
trained to spot victims of people trafficking and those who are barred from
entering the country.”
The latest
strike by more than 1,000 border staff at six airports – Heathrow, Gatwick,
Birmingham, Cardiff, Manchester and Glasgow – is due to end at 7am on Saturday.
There have
been few delays for passengers as hundreds of military personnel and civil servants
were brought in to cover striking workers. Many passengers cleared passport
control in less than five minutes.
The new
figures apply to people who have been stopped, even for a few minutes, using
IS81 forms and then detained for further checks.
An IS81
form gives immigration officers the authority to detain people while they
undertake further inquiries, according to Home Office documents. Many asylum
seekers hand themselves in to border guards on arrival.
Soldiers,
sailors and civil servants filling in for Border force guards are not allowed
to issue IS81 forms because they have not received sufficient training. A
Border Force guard who continues to work through the strike must instead
authorise the form.
The PCS has
threatened to seek legal action if evidence is found that new arrivals in the
UK are being waved through without proper checks.
Home
secretary Suella Braverman, whose plans to train members of the armed forces to
cover for striking border force workers have been criticised by unions as a
‘despicable strike-breaking move’.
Suella
Braverman, the home secretary, has repeatedly said her first responsibility is
the security of the nation.
A Home
Office spokesperson said: “Border Force’s number one priority is to maintain a
secure border and we have not compromised on this. The Guardian’s own figures
show more people have been detained further at Manchester airport this year
compared to last year.
“Non-striking
Border Force staff, with the full range of appropriate powers, are continuing
to complete their vital roles, including stopping and detaining passengers
where appropriate, supported by military personnel and civil servant
volunteers.”
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