Nigel
Farage backs ‘mass deportations’ in new immigration proposal
Migrants
arriving in Britain by small boats should be arrested on arrival, detained in
Royal Air Force bases, denied the right to asylum, and deported within 30 days,
Reform UK leader tells The Times.
August
23, 2025 5:09 pm CET
By
Marianne Gros
https://www.politico.eu/article/nigel-farage-backs-mass-deportations-in-new-immigration-proposal/
Reform UK
party leader Nigel Farage will push for the mass deportation of asylum seekers
in a new Illegal Migration Bill expected on Aug. 26.
In an
interview with The Times published on Saturday, the far-right politician, whose
party currently leads consistently in the polls, said migrants coming to
Britain by small boats should be arrested on arrival, detained in Royal Air
Force bases, denied the right to asylum, and deported within 30 days.
“The aim
of this legislation is mass deportations,” Farage told The Times, pointing to
“a massive crisis in Britain” that is “not only posing a national security
threat but it’s leading to public anger that frankly is not very far away from
disorder.”
The bill
will include the signing of deals with countries like Afghanistan and Eritrea,
two of the top five countries from which most people arriving in small boats
are from, according to data from the Home Office.
Reform UK
is open to revisiting the Conservative party’s plan of deporting asylum-seekers
to Rwanda — despite the fact that the High Court ruled the plan was unlawful in
2023 — and argues Albania could be another destination option.
A
long-standing critic of the European Convention on Human Rights, Farage says
the proposed bill will take the U.K. out of the ECHR, an idea also backed by
some conservative leaders. Pulling out of the ECHR would threaten the Northern
Ireland Good Friday peace agreement, which includes participation in the ECHR
as a safeguard.
Farage
said he also wants to scrap the U.K.’s own Human Rights Act and wants
derogation from a number of other treaties that protect human rights like the
U.N. Convention Against Torture and the Refugee Convention.
Home
Office data puts the total number of asylum applications at 111,000 in the year
ending June 2025, half of whom arrived via “irregular routes.” That’s fewer
than the number of asylum seekers in Germany, Spain, Italy and France. The
asylum grant rate was 48 percent during that period.
Some
43,000 people arrived in small boats in the same period, according to the data.


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