Illegal
immigrants to UK face eviction without court order under new plans
Landlords
who fail to check tenants’ immigration status face five-year jail
terms as part of government crackdown to reduce UK’s appeal as a
migrant destination
Nicholas Watt Chief
political correspondent
Monday 3 August 2015
08.24 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/aug/03/illegal-immigrants-face-eviction-without-court-order-under-plans-to-discourage-migrants
Immigrants living in
Britain illegally will face abrupt eviction from rental properties
under new laws designed to make Britain a tougher place to live in,
the government will announce as it redoubles its response to the
Calais migrant crisis.
In a dramatic
illustration of the warning directed at migrants, by the home
secretary, Theresa May, that Britain’s “streets are not paved
with gold”, the government will change the law to allow landlords
to evict such immigrants without a court order.
Rogue landlords who
fail to check the immigration status of tenants could be fined or
imprisoned for up to five years under a new criminal offence to be
included in a new immigration bill.
Greg Clark, the
communities secretary, will also announce that the legislation will
create a blacklist of persistent rogue landlords and letting agents
to allow councils to know where to concentrate their enforcement
action. “We are determined to crack down on rogue landlords,”
said Clark.
The announcement by
Clark, who will also announce new measures to prevent rogue landlords
renting out sub-standard properties, comes as May and foreign
secretary, Philip Hammond, prepare to take it turns chairing meetings
of the government’s emergency Cobra committee in response to the
Calais crisis.
David Cameron, who
remains in Britain this week on the first stage of his summer
holiday, has said that the government will leave no stone unturned as
it responds to what he described as the “swarm of people” from
Calais. A new fence to protect the entrance to the Channel tunnel on
the French side will be completed on Friday.
The government was
accused of acting in a “morally reprehensible” way after the Home
Office confirmed it was planning to strip families of the automatic
right to benefits if their asylum applications were rejected.
The Refugee Council
expressed “grave concerns” as the Home Office minister James
Brokenshire defended plans to remove automatic benefits from families
who did not win asylum as a way of signalling that the UK was not “a
land of milk and honey”.
The move is part of
a government initiative to discourage migrants from leaving their
countries of origin in the first place by showing that Britain is a
cold place for those whose asylum applications are rejected. The home
secretary joined forces with her French counterpart, Bernard
Cazeneuve, to send a signal to would-be migrants that they will not
necessarily face a warm welcome.
In a joint article
for the Sunday Telegraph, the two ministers warned the world is
facing a global migration crisis as they pledged to offer refuge to
those fleeing conflict or persecution. But they said it is important
to break the link between “crossing the Mediterranean and achieving
settlement in Europe”.
May and Cazeneuve
wrote: “Ultimately, the long-term answer to this problem lies in
reducing the number of migrants who are crossing into Europe from
Africa. Many see Europe, and particularly Britain, as somewhere that
offers the prospect of financial gain. This is not the case – our
streets are not paved with gold.”
Clark will intensify
these warnings when he announces plans to make it easier to evict
illegal immigrants from their homes. Under the forthcoming
immigration bill, landlords will be expected to evict illegal
immigrants soon after receiving a Home Office notice that their
tenant no longer has the right to rent in the UK. In some
circumstances landlords will be able to act without a court order
A scheme in which
landlords check the immigration status of tenants, which is currently
being piloted in the West Midlands, will be extended across the
country. Under the Right to Rent scheme, landlords will be obliged to
see evidence of a person’s right to remain in the UK by examining
their passport or biometric residence permit.
A new criminal
offence will target unscrupulous landlords and letting agents who
fail repeatedly to carry out the “Right to Rent” checks or fail
to remove illegal immigrants from their properties. They could be
fined, jailed for up to five years or face further sanctions under
the Proceeds of Crime Act.
The government will
also announce a new and tougher fit and proper person test for
landlords of properties that have to be licensed to ensure they are
safe for tenants, extending rent repayment orders to allow local
authorities to claim back rent payments from landlords who abuse the
housing benefit system by failing to maintain their property to a
good standard and allowing councils to crack down on rogue landlords
who rent out unsafe accommodation by allowing the sharing of tenancy
deposit protection.
Clark said: “We
are determined to crack down on rogue landlords who make money out of
illegal immigration – exploiting vulnerable people and undermining
our immigration system. In future, landlords will be required to
ensure that the people they rent their properties to are legally
entitled to be in the country. We will also require them to meet
their basic responsibilities as landlords, cracking down on those who
rent out dangerous, dirty and overcrowded properties.”
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