Farage
vows mass deportations to tackle small boats
Nick
Eardley
Political
Correspondent, BBC News
Tabby
Wilson
BBC News
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9vd3rx33g1o
Reform UK
is pledging mass deportations of asylum seekers who arrive in the UK in small
boats.
The
party's leader - Nigel Farage - has told The Times that there is a massive
crisis in the UK, which threatens national security and could lead to public
disorder.
Farage's
Reform may have only four MPs but they are riding high in the polls - not least
because of frustration over record-high small boats crossings.
We now
have more of an idea of what the party would do to tackle the issue.
Labour
has called the plan pie in the sky. The Conservatives said they would deliver a
credible plan that would work in practice.
Farage
tells the Times that if people know they will be detained and deported they
will stop coming "very quickly".
He wants
to take Britain out of the European Convention on Human Rights and ban small
boats arrivals from claiming asylum.
People
could be detained on disused RAF bases and returned to countries like
Afghanistan and Eritrea if agreements were reached.
Many of
these measures could face legal challenges but Reform's leadership is convinced
radical action is needed.
"The
aim of this legislation is mass deportations," Farage told The Times.
"We
have a massive crisis in Britain. It is not only posing a national security
threat but it's leading to public anger that frankly is not very far away from
disorder.
"There
is only one way to stop people coming into Britain and that is to detain them
and deport them."
'People
are angry': Behind the wave of asylum hotel protests
The
government faces growing pressure over immigration, with a record 111,000
asylum applications made to the UK during the year to June.
Figures
released by the Home Office this week said that despite increased applications,
spending on asylum in the UK was down by 12%.
The total
stood at £4.76bn in the year ending March 2025, down from £5.38bn the previous
year.
Small
boat arrivals saw a 38% increase from the previous year, with more than half of
those arrivals from Afghanistan, Eritrea, Iran, Sudan and Syria.
Home
Secretary Yvette Cooper said that Labour had "inherited a broken
immigration and asylum system that the previous government left in chaos".
She said
the new government had strengthened immigration controls and "sharply
increased" enforcement and returns.
Respnding
to the Reform leader's proposals, Angela Eagle, Labour's border security
minister, said: "Nigel Farage is simply plucking numbers out of the air,
another pie in the sky policy from a party that will say anything for a
headline."
"We
are getting a grip of the broken asylum system," she added. "Making
sure those with no right to be here are removed or deported."
The
Conservatives said Reform UK was recycling their ideas.
"This
big reveal is just recycling many ideas the Conservatives have already
announced," said shadow home secretary Chris Philp.
"Nigel
Farage previously claimed mass deportations were impossible, and now he says
it's his policy," Philp added. "Who knows what he'll say next."

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário