In 2022, 45,755 men, women and children crossed the ocean in small boats to reach the UK, most of whom then claimed asylum. Nearly 3,000 people have already made the crossing this year, with official estimates expecting more than 80,000 this year.
Now, Rishi Sunak has vowed to crack down on those crossing the English Channel (an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that separates Southern England from northern France) in small boats by introducing the illegal immigration bill.?Powers under the Illegal Migration Bill include:
Issuing a warning, Sunak said that those who enter UK illegally will not be allowed to claim asylum."If you come here illegally, you can't claim asylum. You can't benefit from our modern slavery protections. You can't make spurious human rights claims and you can't stay," Rishi Sunak said in a tweet.
The Home Office says there are a number of "safe and legal" routes to the UK. However, some are only available to people from specific countries such as Afghanistan and Ukraine or British National status holders in Hong Kong.Other asylum routes only accept a limited number of refugees:
Organisations, including the Refugee Council and Amnesty International, says there are no safe and legal routes for most people to seek asylum in the UK.
Rights groups and opposition parties have criticised the new law and say that the plan is unworkable and unfairly scapegoats vulnerable refugees.The UK has already tried to implement deportations, last year introducing a program to relocate some asylum seekers to Rwanda.
However, no flights to Rwanda have left the UK yet after the plan was grounded in June last year by an injunction from the European Court of Human Rights.
For more on news and current affairs from around the world, please visit?Indiatimes News.