Labour continues hostile environment for migrants despite riots

  • Post last modified:August 21, 2024
  • Reading time:5 mins read


The Labour Party government has announced new measures to curb the arrival of asylum seekers on boats from France and to step up the removal of failed asylum seekers. This includes increasing capacity at detention centres pioneered under Tony Blair’s government. It shows that, far from offering ‘change’, Labour has effectively played into the far-right’s narrative in the wake of the recent race riots – with some accusing it of legitimising them.

Labour: stop the boats and send them home

Labour said 100 new “specialist intelligence and investigation officers” would be recruited to the National Crime Agency (NCA) to help dismantle smuggling gangs that run the dangerous Channel crossings.

The Home Office added that the government also aims over the next six months to achieve the highest rate of deportations of failed asylum seekers for five years. The goal is to remove more than 14,000 people by the end of the year, according to the Times.

The new Labour government intends to increase detention capacity at removal centres and sanction employers who hire people with no right to work in the UK. Home secretary Yvette Cooper said:

We are taking strong and clear steps to boost our border security and ensure the rules are respected and enforced.

Stopping the small boat arrivals was a key issue in the 4 July election, in which Labour won a thumping majority.

Labour: back to the even badder old days

Within days of taking power, prime minister Keir Starmer scrapped a controversial scheme to deport illegal migrants to Rwanda, which had been a flagship policy of the last Conservative government.

Starmer has instead pledged to dismantle the people-smuggling gangs who organise the crossings and are paid thousands of euros by each migrant.

The Home Office is recruiting a so-called Border Security Commander who will work with European countries against the people-smuggling gangs.

Starmer has also pledged with French president Emmanuel Macron to strengthen “cooperation” in handling the surge in undocumented migrant numbers.

The Home Office said the NCA is pursuing about 70 investigations against criminal networks involved in people trafficking. It said the government would issue financial penalty notices, business closure orders and bring possible prosecutions against anyone employing “illegal” workers.

The department also said it was adding 290 beds to two removal centres and redeploying staff to try to remove failed asylum seekers at the highest rate since 2018. The Home Office did not give figures on the numbers involved.

Starmer giving credence to the far right

However, people on X were quick to point out just what Labour was doing:

Minnie Rahman of migrant rights group Praxis accused Labour of “legitimising the far right”:

And, as the Green Party’s Peter Underwood summed up – Labour has still done nothing about safe routes:

Enver Solomon, of the Refugee Council, accused the government of “wasting taxpayers’ money on expanding detention places” and said it should be investing in voluntary returns programmes.

If you treat people with respect, humanity and support them to return, many more people return.

Enver also urged ministers to focus on providing safe routes to deter small boat crossings, arguing “unless the government also provides safe routes, it won’t succeed”.

Ultimately, it seems that Labour is quite happy to continue the Tories ‘hostile environment‘ for refugees and asylum seekers – which is exactly what the far right want.

Featured image via the Canary

Additional reporting via Agence France-Presse





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