Connect with us

News

UK aims to boost migrant returns with new ‘support’ deals

Published

on

UK aims to boost migrant returns with new ‘support’ deals

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The UK is seeking to accelerate returns of migrants to 11 countries including Iraq, Ethiopia and Vietnam in a bid to reduce the number of people residing in the country without the right to work or study.

The government has posted a contract opportunity worth £15mn over three years for a commercial partner to support the “reintegration” of people returning from Britain to their home countries.

The Home Office intends to deliver the support in Albania, Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Iraq, Jamaica, Nigeria, Pakistan, Vietnam and Zimbabwe, according to official documents.

Advertisement

Activists have highlighted human rights violations in Iraq where the UK government acknowledges that returnees’ without certain documentation are at real risk of serious harm at security checkpoints when attempting to travel internally.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to “smash the gangs” that traffic asylum seekers across the Channel on small boats. 

He has also vowed to significantly accelerate the return of irregular migrants to their home countries in a bid to reduce the increasing cost of supporting asylum seekers and foreign national offenders. 

The government has identified a £6.4bn overspend in the asylum budget for this year, which it blamed for decisions to cut public spending elsewhere and raise taxes in the autumn budget.

According to a report released on Thursday by the Institute for Fiscal Studies think-tank, the previous Conservative government overspent billions each year on average on the asylum system between 2021 and 2023.

Advertisement

The contract released by the Home Office this month indicates where the government intends to focus its resources on migrant returns, including through bilateral agreements.

Previous administrations have struggled to significantly increase returns in part because of claims brought by migrants on human rights grounds and the large costs involved.

Home secretary Yvette Cooper announced last week that the government aimed to increase returns of migrants — which have dropped precipitously over the past decade — to levels last seen in 2018. 

She has set a target of returning 14,500 migrants over the next six months, which can include asylum seekers, foreign national offenders, and people living and working in the UK illegally.

Labour has formed a “returns unit” inside the Home Office to fast track cases of people from priority countries and hired around 300 of the planned 1,000 people to staff this unit.

Advertisement

One issue facing the government as it seeks to accelerate returns is that many of the people arriving in the UK to claim asylum are not from the country’s list of “safe states”.

Under international law, people seeking asylum cannot be returned to a country if it puts their safety in jeopardy. The return of people from countries not listed as safe are examined on a case-by-case basis.

The Home Office said the government was planning to deliver “a major surge in immigration enforcement and returns activity to remove people with no right to be in the UK and ensure the rules are respected and enforced”.

It added that continued international co-operation with partner nations played “a critical role”, and that it would be “working closely with a number of countries across the globe”.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

News

Palisades and Eaton Fires May Not Be Fully Extinguished for Weeks

Published

on

Palisades and Eaton Fires May Not Be Fully Extinguished for Weeks

It may take weeks or longer for firefighters to fully extinguish the two most destructive fires that have ravaged parts of the Los Angeles area, fire officials warned.

The sheer sizes of those blazes, the Palisades and Eaton fires, have presented a significant challenge. They have charred almost 40,000 acres combined and are still only partly contained.

Difficult weather conditions have also hindered efforts. David Acuna, a battalion chief with Cal Fire, said the persistence of strong winds, and the fact that fires were burning through homes, which can generate intense heat, made containment impossible when the blazes first ignited.

Crews have been trying to establish a boundary around the fires, using trenches, natural barriers and other methods to prevent further spread. But Capt. Erik Scott, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Fire Department, said, “It’s going to be a slow, arduous process.”

The emergence of smaller fires over the last week has further complicated efforts. Of particular concern was the Auto fire in Ventura County, northwest of Los Angeles, which grew to more than 50 acres before being contained. Officials worried about it breaking free again in windy conditions.

Advertisement

These fires have required an immediate response from both air and ground crews to prevent them from growing, Mr. Acuna said, which diverts resources from the larger blazes.

Stopping the fires’ forward progress is only the first step. Firefighters must also extinguish all remaining flames inside the contained area.

Mr. Scott said this second part of the process would also take time. Among other steps, he said, firefighters need to use hand tools to scrape away brush near the burn perimeter and turn over smoldering piles to ensure nothing is hot enough to reignite.

These timelines are not unusual for large fires. In 2018, the Woolsey fire burned through nearly 100,000 acres in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, destroying over 1,600 structures. The fire ignited in early November and was not contained for two weeks. And it took until early January for the fire to be fully extinguished.

The Santa Ana winds that have repeatedly raised the fire danger over the last week have so far proven lighter than anticipated on Tuesday, but forecasters warn that wind speeds could increase on Wednesday. The region remains critically dry, with little rain expected in the near future. The combination of those elements is threatening to ignite more fires across Southern California, and could further hinder firefighters’ efforts.

Advertisement

Erin McCann contributed reporting.

Continue Reading

News

Top BlackRock executive Mark Wiedman to depart

Published

on

Top BlackRock executive Mark Wiedman to depart

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Top BlackRock executive Mark Wiedman is departing, in a move that disrupts the asset manager’s planning for the eventual departure of founder Larry Fink, according to four people close to the company.

Wiedman had been widely discussed as a potential successor to Fink for more than a decade and had recently been one of the $11.5tn asset manager’s most prominent public faces as the head of its client business.

BlackRock’s board described him in as a regulatory filing last year as one of three “senior leaders who we believe will play critical roles in BlackRock’s future” as it granted him a special retention package.

Advertisement

However, Wiedman, who led the integration and rapid growth of BlackRock’s flagship index and exchange traded fund business, has opted not to wait around. His departure is expected to be announced very shortly, the people said. He is forfeiting $8mn in stock options, according to the proxy.

Wiedman’s departure comes after the world’s largest asset manager embarked on a $28bn acquisition spree last year to bulk up its footprint in the fast-growing and lucrative alternative assets sector. The strategic moves not only put pressure on Fink, 72, to personally oversee their success, but also brought in a clutch of high-powered and high-paid executives who need to be carefully managed.

Fink, who has led BlackRock since its 1988 founding, is very popular with investors and is among the most influential figures in finance. But analysts and some within the firm have begun expressing concerns whether the slow pace of succession planning will drive the next generation of top talent to start going elsewhere. BlackRock president Rob Kapito, 67, is also a founder of the firm.

BlackRock declined to comment.

Wiedman is leaving almost exactly a year after Salim Ramji, another executive who was also once touted as a potential leader. Ramji became chief executive of Vanguard, BlackRock’s chief rival in the US and the world’s second-largest asset manager. Several other lower-ranking executives have also left in the past few years to take leadership jobs at smaller firms, including Daniel Gamba to Northern Trust and Zach Buchwald to Russell Investments.

Advertisement

After Ramji left, the group touted its strong stable of current leaders, including Wiedman and two other executives who also received special option grants: chief operating officer Robert Goldstein and chief financial officer Martin Small.

“BlackRock is proud to have a record of our firm’s alumni going on to lead multiple investment management companies and financial institutions,” it has previously said.

A senior Wall Street figure with knowledge of the situation said “Larry [Fink] and Rob [Kapito] are not going anywhere. They just made a major acquisition and you have to see that through, [but] Wiedman is at an age where if he doesn’t make a move, he ages out of being a CEO.”

A lawyer by training, Wiedman joined BlackRock in 2004 after stints at the US Treasury and McKinsey. He started BlackRock’s financial markets advisory consulting arm, which helped central banks and government agencies dig through the rubble of the 2008 financial crisis.

Wiedman negotiated the 2009 purchase and integration of Barclays Global Investors, the deal widely seen as the most important in BlackRock’s history. He then headed up the resulting iShares business from 2011 to 2019 as it developed into a juggernaut in index and ETFs.

Advertisement

Keenly interested in talent development, Wiedman recruited or promoted many of BlackRock’s top executives, including Small and Rachel Lord, who heads the international business.

Continue Reading

News

World News Live Today January 15, 2025: Donald Trump says to create new department to collect revenue from foreign sources on inauguration day

Published

on

World News Live Today January 15, 2025: Donald Trump says to create new department to collect revenue from foreign sources on inauguration day

Live

World News Live: Get real-time updates on international politics, economic changes, conflicts, and environmental issues. Access the latest breaking news and in-depth stories as they happen, keeping you informed of events shaping the world.

Latest news on January 15, 2025: Trump did not specify whether the new agency would replace collections of tariffs, duties, fees and fines by US Customs and Border Protection.

World News Live: Welcome to our World News live blog, your go-to source for instant updates on major events across the globe. Whether it’s political shifts, economic trends, environmental crises, or international conflicts, we deliver real-time reports to keep you informed and engaged with the latest global developments. Disclaimer: This is an AI-generated live blog and has not been edited by Hindustan Times staff.…Read More

Advertisement

Follow all the updates here:

Jan 15, 2025 12:30 AM IST

US News Live : Donald Trump says to create new department to collect revenue from foreign sources on inauguration day

  • Donald Trump said in a social media post he would create the department on January 20, the day he takes office as president for a second term

Read the full story here

Jan 15, 2025 12:15 AM IST

US News Live : Speaker Johnson orders US Capitol flags raised to full height for Donald Trump’s inauguration

  • The Republican leader’s decision means that President-elect Donald Trump will not take the oath of office for his second term under a half-staff flag

Read the full story here

Continue Reading

Trending