UK Home Office considers tagging asylum-seekers

A migrant pregnant woman is helped to board on a bus in order to be taken for processing on the southeast coast of England. (File/AFP)
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Updated 28 August 2023
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UK Home Office considers tagging asylum-seekers

  • Electronic monitoring ‘something the Home Office has been keen on,’ source says
  • Shadow employment minister calls proposal ‘just another gimmick’

LONDON: The UK Home Office is considering fitting asylum-seekers with electronic tags as a way to prevent those who cannot be placed in a detention facility from fleeing, The Times reported on Sunday.

Under the Illegal Migration Act, the government has a legal duty to detain and remove those arriving in the UK illegally, either to Rwanda or another “safe” country. But officials have been exploring alternatives amid a shortage of available space in Home Office accommodation, the online report said.

Another possibility being considered is requiring asylum-seekers to report regularly to the Home Office in order to receive support such as accommodation or financial aid, a source from the department said.

“Tagging has always been something that the Home Office has been keen on and is the preferred option to withdrawing financial support, which would be legally difficult as migrants would be at risk of being left destitute,” the person said.

When asked about the reports, Home Secretary Suella Braverman told BBC Breakfast: “We’re considering a range of options, all options, to ensure that we can exert some control over those people who are arriving illegally so that we can thereafter remove them to a safe country like Rwanda.

“We will of course need to increase some of our detention capacity.”

Justin Madders, Labour’s shadow employment minister, described the idea as a gimmick.

“The only people you tag are criminals. And my understanding is that people who are coming to this country seeking asylum are not criminals,” he told Sky News.

“They are usually people fleeing persecution. And if there’s a problem with people absconding, this is the first I’ve heard about it. Clearly the solution to that is actually to get on and process the asylum applications a lot quicker than is happening.

“I think this is just another gimmick that is not dealing with the root of the problem at all.”

Despite Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s pledge to “stop the boats,” channel crossings have surpassed 19,000 this year.

On Thursday, the backlog of asylum cases rose to a record of more than 175,000, an increase of 44 percent from the same time last year. The spike came despite the government almost doubling its expenditure on asylum-related matters.
 


UN warns that South Sudan is on a ‘dangerous precipice’ as political deadlock escalates violence

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UN warns that South Sudan is on a ‘dangerous precipice’ as political deadlock escalates violence

  • There were high hopes when South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 after a long conflict but the country slid into a civil war
UNITED NATIONS: Political deadlock in South Sudan is sharply escalating violence, putting the world’s newest nation on a “dangerous precipice,” the United Nations’ peacekeeping chief warned.
Jean-Pierre Lacroix urged the UN Security Council and the broader international community to ensure that South Sudan’s government and opposition return to dialogue and agree on a way forward.
At the moment, he warned, “Both sides claim to be acting in self-defense, while at the same time preparing for the possibility of large-scale hostilities.”
There were high hopes when oil-rich South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 after a long conflict. But the country slid into a civil war in December 2013 largely based on ethnic divisions, when forces loyal to Salva Kiir, an ethnic Dinka, battled those loyal to Riek Machar, an ethnic Nuer.
More than 400,000 people were killed in the war, which ended with a 2018 peace agreement that brought the opponents together in a government of national unity with Kiir as president and Machar as vice president. But implementation has been slow, and a long-delayed presidential election is now scheduled for December.
In a major escalation of tensions in March 2025, a Nuer militia seized an army garrison. Kiir’s government responded, charging Machar and seven other opposition figures with treason, murder, terrorism and other crimes, and suspended the vice president. The treason trial has been going on since late 2025.
Lacroix, the UN undersecretary-general for peacekeeping, singled out the escalation of fighting in recent weeks in Jonglei state, northeast of the capital, Juba, pointing to reports of bombings, inflammatory rhetoric, severe restrictions on humanitarian access, and over 280,000 people displaced by the violence, “as per government sources.”
The peacekeeping chief said the African Union Peace and Security Council, the regional group IGAD and the United Nations have made clear that there is no military solution and the 2018 peace agreement remains “the only viable framework for peace and stability.”
“Let me be clear,” Lacroix said, “without consensus, without the participation of all those who have placed their hopes into this peace process, and in all corners, in all 10 states of the country, any election will not be credible and therefore worthy of our support.”
He also called South Sudan one of the most dangerous places in the world for humanitarian workers, pointing to 350 attacks on staff and facilities in 2025 compared with 255 in 2024.
Despite government assurances, he said, the UN’s humanitarian partners report persistent restraints in delivering aid, especially to opposition-held areas, during the country’s worst cholera outbreak. Over 98,000 cases have been reported since it began in September 2024, and there is a resurgence of cases in Jonglei, he said.
Lacroix also cited airstrikes and looting affecting health facilities, most recently a Feb. 3 air attack on a hospital in Lankien, a town in Jonglei, that destroyed critical medical supplies and injured staff.
“These incidents raise serious concerns about shrinking humanitarian space at a time when more than 10 million people require humanitarian assistance, including 7.5 million facing food insecurity and over 1.3 million returnees and refugees from Sudan,” he said.
Against this upsurge in fighting, Lacroix said the UN has been forced to cut its peacekeeping force in South Sudan because of a lack of funding, resulting in a reduction in patrols to protect civilians by up to 40 percent in areas where UN forces are decreasing, and by up to 70 percent in areas where bases have been forced to close.