Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood announces plans to deport thousands of failed asylum seekers immediately after rejection, preventing in-country appeals under human rights laws. This strategy leverages existing legislation to expedite removals to home countries, where appeals can proceed.
Targeting Backlog and Costs
The initiative addresses a massive backlog exceeding 100,000 appeals from rejected claims. Many individuals currently reside in taxpayer-funded hotels, incurring millions in expenses. Officials identify 25 safe countries for deportations, including India, Brazil, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Albania, and Ukraine, where no real risk of serious harm exists.
Legal Framework and Process
Under the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002, the Home Office removes rights to UK-based accommodation, support, and appeals upon claim rejection. Migrants receive options for voluntary departure with funded flights or enforced removal. Border Security and Asylum Minister Alex Norris states: “A firm and fair approach to immigration does not mean hard-working taxpayers provide for individuals with refused human rights claims, many of whom are vile criminals. That is why we are scaling up the use of these powers to deport more foreign national offenders to their home countries, where their appeals can be heard. We will not hesitate to remove incentives which draw people to the UK illegally.”
Recent Statistics
Last year saw 14,000 failed asylum claims from these 25 safe countries, with 4,000 from India, 2,700 from Nigeria, and 1,750 from Albania. By the end of 2025, failed appeals reached 104,400—nearly double the 2024 figure. Removals without appeal rose 50% to 8,476, yet overall deportations fell to 10.6% of the 80,000 rejected seekers due to surging appeals.
Political Opposition
Labour leadership contender Angela Rayner criticizes the policy as “un-British” and claims it “pulls the rug” from hardworking families. Nearly 50 MPs signaled potential rebellion against the immigration measures last month.

