More than
600 Brazilians deported by Home Office on three secret flights
Record
number of deportees includes children who may have spent most of their lives in
the UK
Diane Taylor
Sun 1 Dec
2024 07.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/dec/01/brazilians-deported-home-office-secret-flights-uk
More than
600 Brazilians, including 109 children, have been secretly removed from the UK
– on the three largest Home Office deportation charter flights in history –
since the Labour government came to power, the Observer has learned.
The Home
Office has never before removed any nationality in such large numbers on
individual deportation charter flights. It is thought that children have never
before been removed on these flights.
According to
freedom of information data seen by the Observer, the three flights were on 9
August, when 205 people including 43 children were removed; 23 August, when 206
people were removed, including 30 children; and 27 September, when 218 people
were removed, including 36 children. All the deported children were part of
family units, and many of them would have been settled at school and are likely
to have spent most if not all of their lives in the UK.
The returns
were classed as voluntary and were likely to include people who had overstayed
their visas. The Home Office offers incentives for voluntary returnees of up to
£3,000 including for babies and children. The sweeteners are provided in the
form of pre-loaded cards that can be activated once people touch down in their
home country.
The
government is keen to trumpet its deportation credentials with figures
published on Thursday revealing 8,308 enforced and voluntary returns between
July and September 2024, a 16% increase on the same period last year. The
majority – 6,247 – were voluntary returns, an increase of 12% on this category
of returns during the same period in 2023. While the government is keen to
promote the numbers returned they have failed to mention publicly that the
destination of these historic deportation flights was Brazil.
Latin
American rights organisations have raised concerns about how the Home Office
was able to get such large numbers of a single nationality including
unprecedented numbers of children likely to be settled at school out of the
country completely under the radar.
The
organisation Coalition of Latin Americans in the UK expressed alarm about the
hundreds of secret deportations: “We are concerned by the sharp increase in
voluntary returns of Brazilians in the last year. As the largest Latin American
community in the UK, Brazilians face significant barriers to accessing
high-quality information and accredited legal advice, particularly in their own
language. Many arrived through onward migration from EU countries. However,
post-Brexit immigration rule changes have left hundreds of them and their
non-EU family members at risk of having their rights denied due to
misinformation and harsh eligibility requirements.” The coalition warned that
Brazilian women are particularly at risk for the Home Office initiative to
remove Brazilians from the UK en masse, particularly those experiencing
gender-based violence.
“These women
are often trapped by abusive partners who use their British or EU passports as
tools of control, leaving them with no viable path to safety or settlement,”
they say.
In one case
a woman was being supported by Latin American Women’s Aid. She was fleeing
violence with her two sons – including a disabled child with special education
needs. They were forced to move between three hotels. The woman was refused
what is called the Migrant Victim of Domestic Abuse Concession, which allows
migrant domestic violence victims to stay in the UK and had no choice but to
return to Brazil.
It is not
known how many people on the three flights did not want to return to Brazil due
to fears about their safety but felt they had no choice but to board the
planes.
“The
government must respond to our requests for fair, affordable and safe routes
toward citizenship and settlement for the many communities who have laid down
roots in this country,” coalition members said.
A Home
Office spokesperson said: “We are already delivering on our plan to ramp up
removal of those with no right to be in the UK, with removals of foreign
offenders and failed asylum seekers at their highest level in half a decade …
“This will reduce our reliance on hotels and costs of accommodation, saving an
estimated £4bn over the next two years.”
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