Mini-mart
crime network a 'pull factor' for illegal migrants, say MPs
1 day ago
Sam
Francis
Political
reporter
BBC
Undercover footage which captures a customer buying illegal cigarettes. BBC
Undercover
filming by the BBC found illegal cigarettes and vapes for sale in the
mini-marts
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ced6wjy5qqjo
Senior
politicians have warned that a UK-wide criminal network uncovered by the BBC is
acting as a pull factor for illegal migration to the UK.
The Home
Office has promised to investigate after a BBC investigation uncovered more
than 100 businesses linked to a Kurdish gang enabling migrants to work
illegally selling counterfeit cigarettes in High Street mini-marts.
Home
Secretary Shabana Mahmood said these kinds of networks "create an
incentive for people to come here illegally".
Responding
to the investigation, Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp said
"no wonder illegal immigrants want to cross the Channel", while
Reform UK accused the government of "looking the other way".
Criminal
network behind UK mini-marts enables migrants to work illegally - BBC
investigation
The BBC
uncovered a criminal network using "ghost directors" to represent
companies' official paperwork while remaining uninvolved in day-to-day
operations.
Undercover
journalists posing as asylum seekers were told how easy it was to take over a
shop and make thousands of pounds a week from illegal tobacco.
HMRC
estimates the trade in illegal cigarettes and vapes costs the UK at least
£2.2bn in lost revenue annually.
The
investigation found asylum seekers working 14-hour shifts for as little as £4
an hour, often in legal limbo while waiting for Home Office decisions.
More than
100 mini-marts, barbershops and car washes, operating from Dundee to south
Devon, were linked to the crime network by the BBC. But a financial crime
investigator told the BBC he believes it goes much wider.
The BBC
also discovered Kurdish builders offering to construct hidden compartments to
conceal contraband during police raids, and Facebook groups advertising
mini-marts for sale.
"This
rampant illegal activity is happening right under the government's nose,"
Philp said.
"No
wonder illegal immigrants want to cross the Channel and come to the UK when it
is possible to do this here."
Only
quitting the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) would unlock the
increased powers to stop illegal "crossings and subsequent illegal
working", Philp said.
Emergency
asylum processing centres were needed to allow refugees to move into legal work
"while those who don't have a right to stay must be returned", the
Liberal Democrats said.
"The
asylum system was broken by the Conservatives and Labour hasn't fixed it,"
Lib Dem home affairs spokesperson Max Wilkinson said.
"The
fact that we have tens of thousands of asylum seekers waiting to be processed
means there's an obvious group of potentially vulnerable people for organised
crime gangs to exploit."
Reform
UK's head of policy Zia Yusuf described the criminal network as
"absolutely scandalous".
"Our
high streets are being used for organised crime, and the government is looking
the other way," he said.
"It's
time these sham businesses were shut down and these criminals deported."
Why do
Channel migrants want to come to the UK?
Was
Starmer right to link Brexit to a rise in small boat crossings?
Business
and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle branded the network uncovered by the BBC as
"unacceptable" adding it "won't be allowed to happen on our
watch".
"Under
this government there's been an increase of 51% of raids on shops and
businesses up and down the country," he said.
Through
Operation Sterling, the government has invested £5m into immigration
enforcement - acknowledging the loose regulation of Britian's labour market was
acting as a pull factor for those entering the UK illegally.
Under the
scheme more than 8,000 illegal migrants were arrested in the past year, with
about 1,000 removed from the UK.
Last
month, Mahmood said she wanted to "shrink the black economy" and
dismantle the business model of smuggling gangs.
For
obvious reasons, estimating the size of the black economy in the UK is
complicated - but a recent study from researchers at the European Parliament
suggests the size of the UK's was about 11% of the total economy in 2022. This
is lower than the average of 17% across 31 European countries.
The Home
Office say the government's roll out of digital ID will help combat illegal
working by making it easier for employers to check the status of their
employees.
Conservative
shadow work and pensions secretary Helen Whately dismissed the digital ID plan
as a "distraction and a red herring", saying the scheme would not
have stopped the criminal network uncovered by the BBC.

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