Home Office ‘may fit asylum seekers with
electronic tags’
Preferred option for handling growing numbers of
applicants is to increase number of detention places, but tagging has been
mooted as short-term fix
Charlie
Moloney
Sun 27 Aug
2023 23.42 BST
The Home
Office is considering fitting asylum seekers arriving in the UK via
unauthorised means with electronic tags, it has been reported. Officials are
mulling it as a way to prevent people who cannot be housed in limited detention
sites from absconding, according to the Times.
The Illegal
Migration Act places a legal duty on the government to detain and remove those
arriving in the UK illegally, either to Rwanda or another “safe” third country.
But with spaces in Home Office accommodation in short supply, officials have
reportedly been tasked with a “deep dive” into alternatives.
While the
preferred solution is to increase the number of detention places, electronic
tagging has been mooted, as has cutting off financial allowances to someone who
fails to report regularly to the Home Office, the Times cited a source from the
department as saying.
The source
said: “Tagging has always been something that the Home Office has been keen on
and is the preferred option to withdrawing financial support, which would be
legally difficult as migrants would be at risk of being left destitute.”
Asked
whether tagging was under consideration, a source close to the home secretary,
Suella Braverman, said: “We already do it.”
Home Office
data this week showed that Channel crossings topped 19,000 for the year so far,
despite Rishi Sunak’s pledge to “stop the boats”.
The asylum
backlog has soared to a record high, with more than 175,000 people waiting for
an initial decision on an asylum application at the end of June. The bill for
the taxpayer almost doubled in a year to nearly £4bn.
Last week
the UNHCR, the refugee agency that helps the UK government improve its asylum
system, praised a Home Office-funded scheme in Bedfordshire, which it found cut
the cost of accommodating people by more than half when compared with placing
them in detention. The savings came through housing people and giving legal and
welfare support.
The Home
Office under Braverman, however, is intent on overseeing a huge increase in its
detention capacity, which experts estimate will cost billions.
Braverman
told parliament she intended to pursue “a programme of increasing
immigration-detention capacity”, which reportedly includes disused RAF bases
and barges.
The only
barge being used so far is the Bibby Stockholm, which was intended to hold 500
asylum seekers but is now empty after legionella bacteria was discovered
onboard.
The Home
Office has been contacted for comment.


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