Airline
staff being trained to bar people without visas from flights to UK
Exclusive:
Foreign secretary says training for 9,000 workers at European carriers is step
towards more secure borders
Aletha Adu
Political correspondent
Fri 20 Jun
2025 05.00 BST
Thousands of
European airline staff are being trained to stop people boarding flights to
Britain without valid visas, in a move billed by the foreign secretary as a
digital upgrade to border controls.
David Lammy
said the measures marked a step towards “more secure, more digital and more
effective” borders, but the move could raise questions about human rights
safeguards.
More than
9,000 airline workers at carriers including Wizz Air, Jet2 and Lufthansa, have
undertaken training to verify UK visa documents at departure gates in 39
countries, including those on major transit routes for irregular migration such
as Greece, Malta, Italy and Albania.
The scheme,
delivered by the Foreign Office, deputises airline workers as frontline
immigration officers, blocking passengers from even attempting to travel
without the correct paperwork.
The training
is part of the broader rollout of the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) and
eVisa system, which requires travellers – including many EU citizens – to
pre-register before entering the UK.
It
represents a significant overhaul to UK border controls and is now being touted
as a key aspect of Labour’s immigration crackdown.
Lammy said:
“Tackling irregular migration demands cooperation across borders and industries
to disrupt the pathways used by those attempting to enter the UK illegally.
We’re sending a clear message – air travel simply isn’t an option without
proper authorisation and registration.”
The
initiative could attract scrutiny from civil liberties groups that express
concern over legitimate travellers, especially asylum seekers, and would
outsource critical immigration decisions to private airline staff.
It comes as
Labour seek to outflank Reform UK on border control and respond to what the
party believes is public anxiety over uncontrolled immigration. Keir Starmer is
seeking to maintain a hard rhetorical line, with returns and enforcement
appearing to be central to his government’s approach.
The eVisa
system, which replaces physical ID with digital status checks, allows the
government to update and track individuals’ immigration status in real time.
Ministers say this will make it easier to take enforcement action against
overstayers and enable landlords, employers and service providers to verify
people’s rights in the UK more easily.
British
Airways said the training had been helpful for its staff, making them feel
“more confident and prepared” to implement the system. But campaigners said the
policy raises questions about accountability, particularly in cases where
boarding is denied in error.
According to
official statistics, 30,000 people have been returned under current policies,
with a 23% rise in enforced returns and a 14% increase in deportations of
foreign offenders since the 2024 general election.
Diplomats
have been instructed to promote the ETA scheme directly to European
governments, while a public information campaign is being rolled out to alert
EU citizens about the new travel rules.
A British
Airways spokesperson said: “As a carrier, this kind of insight is extremely
useful and absolutely critical for us as it will guide us in how to process our
customer whilst complying with the UK laws. Our stations feel more confident
and prepared in using the ETA/eVisa system.”
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