Refused asylum seeker families will be offered up to £40,000 to leave Britain under pilot scheme, says Shabana Mahmood – UK politics live


Small number of failed asylum seekers will be offered ‘increased incentive payment’, says Mahmood

A small number of asylum seekers whose claims are rejected will be offered an “increased incentive payment” of £10,000 per person and up to £40,000 per family to leave Britain under a pilot scheme, Shabana Mahmood announces.

The home secretary says the government would seek to echo reforms introduced in Denmark, where she said there had been “great success” in using incentives.

She says:

double quotation markThis government will now pilot a similar model for families who are failed asylum seekers, a small number of whom will now be offered an increased incentive payment of £10,000 per person and up to a maximum of £40,000 per family.

These incentives will bring a “significant saving” to the taxpayer if they prove effective, she said.

She adds:

double quotation markWhere a voluntary removal is refused, we will escalate to an enforced removal for those who can be returned to their safe home country.

We are now consulting on precisely how the removal of families with children must take place in a way that is humane and effective.

For too long, families who have failed their claims have known that we are not enforcing our rules, which created a perverse incentive to make a channel crossing with children in a small boat it.

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Key events

The Guardian’s policy editor Kiran Stacey asks the home secretary how much force she is willing to see border officials use against children under her pilot scheme if families are unwilling to leave voluntarily.

Shabana Mahmood says a “targeted consultation” is underway, which includes looking at how best to handle the removal of children.

She says:

double quotation markThere are well-used legal tests for how to do so in a way that is neccessary but also proportionate and how to best judge that and also how to best scruitinise that.

I’d expect the principles that underlie this sort of work in other parts of the public sector to inform the approach that we take in immigration as well.

But that is why, in the end, a voluntary removal is always the best option for all concerned.

And that is the end of the home secretary’s press conference in which she outlined her reforms to create a “firm but fair” asylum system that works for “hard-working” British people.

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