Today’s statistics from the Home
Office reveal that:
-
There has been a major surge
in decisions made by the Home Office in the final quarter of
2023. This includes
over 15,000 refusals, triple the number in the previous
quarter. While this has helped to clear much of the legacy
backlog, it will lead to new pressures in other parts of the
asylum system – including appeals, further submissions, and
returns.
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There were over 8,000
withdrawals in the last quarter of the year,
three quarters of which were
‘implicit’ (ie the Home Office chose to withdraw applications
because people did not turn up to interviews or were late in
returning questionnaires.) Figures published previously by the Home Office suggest
that, of all withdrawals in the year ending September 2023,
around 5,600 are cases still in the UK who the Home Office has
lost contact with. These groups are at a high risk of
destitution and exploitation. The latest figures could
exacerbate this issue further.
-
The total asylum backlog has
started to fall, but the Home Office will struggle to resolve
more recent cases. IPPR estimates that, as of 28 December
2023, up to 55,500 cases were stuck in a new ‘perma-backlog’
under the Illegal Migration Act, because they cannot in general
be granted permission to stay and/or the home secretary would
be obliged to remove them once the Act is fully
implemented.
Responding to the statistics,
Marley Morris, IPPR associate
director for migration, trade and communities,
said:
“In a bid to clear the ‘legacy
backlog’ at the end of last year, the Home Office has surged
through an exceptional number of asylum cases, with a sharp rise
in both refusals and withdrawals. But these quick decisions could
come back to haunt the Home Office. The government will now have
to handle a large caseload of appeals, fresh claims and
returns.
“At the same time, the Home Office
also needs to decide how to handle the growing 'perma-backlog' of
asylum claims which would be subject to the duty to remove under
the Illegal Migration Act once it is implemented in full. Leaving
these claims on hold indefinitely is bad for claimants stuck in
limbo and bad for the Home Office, given the ongoing costs of
accommodating people in hotels”.