Man expelled to France under UK asylum arrangement secretly returns A man who was deported to France by Britain in accordance with the UK and France “one in, one out” asylum arrangement has managed to secretly re-enter Britain and is currently living incognito, according to reports by The Guardian. According to the asylum seeker, his current living conditions are desperate because he is afraid of smugglers, the police, and immigration enforcers. It further emerged that the asylum seeker was attacked by smugglers in France for not working for them, an act that made him return to Britain.Sources from the Guardian were used as the foundation of this account, as information provided by the Home Office and Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants offered insight into the official position and campaign group’s views about the matter. In interviews, the Guardian obtained information from the asylum seeker and some other returnees concerning their living conditions in line with the UK and France agreement.As mentioned, the man confirmed that smugglers working in the vicinity of camps in northern France had started arranging transport using trucks rather than dinghies following the introduction of the policy called “one in, one out.” According to his explanation, smugglers demanded between €1,000 and €2,000 for crossing by boat, whereas trucking cost between €4,000 and €5,000.“After I was sent back to France by the Home Office, the smugglers caught me and wanted to force me to work with them,” he said.“I don’t want to work with the smugglers, and I refused to do so. They beat me so badly that my face is still full of bruises and injuries.”“I managed to escape from them and felt that my only option was to come back to the UK, which is a safer place for me.”According to him, he knew at least 18 other people who came back to the UK following removal from Britain under the said agreement. Furthermore, several other refugees interviewed by The Guardian who returned to Britain from mainland Europe mentioned similar circumstances regarding transportation across the Channel.This “one-in-one-out” approach was employed to curb the flow of small boats and to disrupt the operations of smuggling rings. However, thousands of immigrants continue to make their way across the Channel. As explained in the report, smugglers have changed tactics and started dispatching migrants on more boats from Belgium and providing costly services to transport migrants via lorries that evade detection by authorities stationed on French shores.Data from 28th April revealed that 605 individuals were sent back to France in return for 581 entering the UK using this arrangement. It has been reported that Channel crossings in the present year have declined by about one-third from those in the previous year. One of the causes cited for this drop is the adverse weather conditions in recent months.The immigrant man currently resides in a makeshift room arranged by a friend in London. His reasons for remaining in his place of stay include the factor of fear.“I’m in a city outside London, and I’m scared to leave this room,” he said. “I’m running from the smugglers, the police, and the Home Office. I don’t have a life anymore, and I don’t have a plan.”He added that immigration restrictions could force vulnerable people into illegal activity.“I’m not a bad person for the UK. I want to live in peace here, work legally, and be safe,” he said. “But people like me who are living underground can be forced into crime to survive.”Additionally, it highlighted the story of an asylum seeker who fled Britain earlier this year due to threats of detention and deportation. Now residing in Italy, the man just received an email from the Home Office regarding the possibility of enforcement since the Home Office thinks that he is still within the borders of Britain.“It is crazy to receive this from the Home Office,” he said. “They do not realize I am no longer in the UK.”Seema Syeda of the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants condemned the current border policy and expressed her call for a more effective legal route for immigrants.Speaking on behalf of the Home Office, a spokesperson justified the agreement and discouraged migrants from trying to get back into Britain.“Anyone looking to return to the UK after being removed under the UK-France agreement is wasting their time and money,” the spokesperson said. “They will be removed again.” Source link Post Views: 6 Post navigation Sukhpreet Singh and Ramandeep Kaur accused of hiding newborn’s remains in Canada, mother found in critical condition ‘You are not welcome’: Row erupts after Laura Loomer says she wants to visit India again following Marco Rubio’s trip