The Home Office will appeal against the High Court’s decision to temporarily block the deportation of an Eritrean man to France under the government’s “one in, one out” scheme, Shabana Mahmood has confirmed.
Speaking for the first time since the court’s decision on Tuesday, the new home secretary said: “Last minute attempts to frustrate a removal are intolerable, and I will fight them at every step.”
Ms Mahmood added that she will “fight to end vexatious, last-minute claims” and “robustly defend the British public’s priorities”.
Yesterday evening, the High Court granted an Eritrean man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, a “short period of interim relief” ahead of his deportation to France scheduled for a 9am flight this morning.
Lawyers acting on the man’s behalf said the case “concerns a trafficking claim” and her client, who alleges he has a gunshot wound in his leg, claims he is vulnerable and faces a risk of “destitution” in France.
The Home Office defended the case, saying it was reasonable to expect the man to claim asylum in France.
Mr Justice Sheldon ruled that while there did not appear to be a “real risk” the man would be destitute in France, the trafficking claim required further interrogation.
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The man would have been the first person to be returned to France under the terms of the UK-France deal, which was signed in July and led to the first people being detained after crossing the Channel in August.
In a statement, Ms Mahmood added: “Migrants suddenly deciding they are a modern slave on the eve of their removal, having never made such a claim before, make a mockery of our laws and this country’s generosity.
“I will do whatever it takes to secure our border.”
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The Home Office has confirmed the temporary block on the man’s deportation will be challenged in the courts, and that lawyers acting for the man have 14 days to provide proof for their claim that he has been trafficked to the UK.
It also insisted that the first deportation flight under the UK-France migrants returns deal will still take place this week.
Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch was quick to criticise the government over the ruling on Tuesday, saying: “We told you so”.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage also criticised the plan.
He argued: “Even if the policy worked, one in, one out, and with another one in, still means plus one for everyone that crosses the Channel.”
What is the scheme?
The pilot scheme was announced to much fanfare in July, after French President Emmanuel Macron made a state visit to the UK.
Sir Keir Starmer had hoped the agreement – which would see the UK send asylum seekers who have crossed the Channel back over to France in exchange for migrants with links to Britain – would prove more resilient to court challenges than the Tories’ Rwanda plan.
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He wants the number of migrants being returned to France to gradually increase over the course of the scheme, to deter them from coming in small boats.
The pilot came into force last month and is in place until June 2026.
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