Sunday,
October 20, 2024 -A record number of Nigerians and Ghanaians were
deported to their home countries on one flight, with 44 people forcibly removed
on Friday, October 18, the Home Office has confirmed.
The Home Office said that the Nigeria and Ghana deportations were part
of a “major surge” in immigration enforcement and returns, according to the
Guardian UK.
Since Labour came to power in July 3,600 people have been returned to
various countries, including about 200 to Brazil and 46 on a flight to Vietnam
and Timor Leste.
There are also regular deportation flights to Albania, Lithuania and
Romania.
Deportation flights to Nigeria and Ghana are relatively rare, with just four
recorded since 2020, according to data released under freedom of information
rules.
The previous flights had far fewer people onboard, with six, seven, 16 and 21
respectively. Friday’s flight had more than double that number removed on a
single flight.
The deportation came as news emerged that any asylum seekers who arrive in
Diego Garcia before a treaty between the UK and Mauritius to hand back the
Chagos Islands is finalised will be sent to Saint Helena, a British territory
in the Atlantic Ocean, described as one of the most remote places on
Earth.
One of four Nigerians who spoke with the Guardian while they were held at Brook
House immigration removal centre near Gatwick before their deportation tried to
kill himself.
His cellmate, who witnessed the attempt, said he was “very traumatised”
by what he had seen.
A second man said: “I’ve been in the UK for 15 years as an asylum seeker. I
have no criminal record but the Home Office has refused my claim.”
Fizza Qureshi, the CEO of Migrants’ Rights Network, who was in contact
with some of the people on the Nigeria/Ghana deportation flight before they
left the UK, said: “We are extremely shocked at the cruelty of these
deportations, especially with the speed, secrecy and the lack of access to
legal support. In the words of one detainee we spoke to before he was put on
the flight: ‘The Home Office is playing politics with people’s lives. We have
not done anything wrong other than cry for help.”
A Home Office spokesperson said: “We have already begun delivering 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, with over 3,600 returned in the first two months of the new government.”
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